Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Handover of kidnapped Colombian general begins

-

The highly anticipated handover of a general and four other hostages captured by FARC guerrillas got underway Thursday, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said, paving the way for the resumption of peace talks.

"The procedure is underway," said the president, referring to the release of General Ruben Alzate and four other army captives being held by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

Colombia had suspended peace talks with the rebels over Alzate's capture.

Officials provided few immediate details on the handover, saying only that a deal was reached Wednesday to free the hostages "as soon as possible."

If the handover goes smoothly, Santos should be able to resume the two-year-old negotiations in Cuba on which he has staked his presidency.

"I'm going to give instructions for negotiators to return to Havana and continue talks, hopefully at a good pace, so they can finish this process as quickly as possible," Santos said.

Picture released by Colombian Presidency press office shows Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos d...
Picture released by Colombian Presidency press office shows Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos during a televised speech in Bogota on November 17, 2014
, Presidencia/AFP

The Red Cross, which the government asked to intervene in the standoff, has a "green light" to oversee the hostages' release, local spokeswoman Patricia Rey said.

The FARC for its part called its decision to release the hostages "a great gesture" that would save the talks.

"What we're doing is a great gesture of peace, reconciliation, good will and commitment to the peace process," said the guerrillas' third in command, Jorge Torres Victoria, alias Pablo Catatumbo.

He repeated the FARC's demand for a bilateral ceasefire to stop further "incidents of war" from derailing the negotiations.

The government has so far rejected calls for a ceasefire, which Santos argues would strengthen the rebels' hand.

- Conflicting accounts of capture -

General Alzate, the head of an army task force charged with fighting rebels and drug traffickers in the jungle-covered department of Choco, is the highest-ranking officer to be captured by the FARC in 50 years of conflict.

He was taken hostage along with Corporal Jorge Rodriguez and army adviser Gloria Urrego as they traveled by boat to visit a civilian energy project in the remote western region.

Colombian Army General Rubén Alzate  who was kidnapped November 16  2014 in a jungle in Choco regio...
Colombian Army General Rubén Alzate, who was kidnapped November 16, 2014 in a jungle in Choco region, probably by FARC guerrillas, is shown in this file photo from August 15, 2014
Army Press Office, AFP/File

FARC fighters were already holding two other soldiers captured in combat in the eastern department of Arauca on November 9, Paulo Cesar Rivera and Jonathan Diaz.

Diplomats from Cuba and Norway, two of the countries acting as guarantors of the peace process, announced Wednesday that a deal had been struck to free all five hostages, but gave few details.

The defense ministry says Alzate, 55, was ambushed by armed guerrillas on arrival in the village of Las Mercedes.

But questions have emerged about why he was apparently traveling in civilian clothing and without a security escort.

Local residents denied Thursday that he had been ambushed, casting further uncertainty on an incident that derailed the controversial peace talks just as they reached their two-year anniversary Wednesday.

"Four men dressed in civilian clothes arrived in a boat about half an hour before the general," said resident Presentacion Palomeque.

"They sat on the benches in front of the church. When the general and his companions arrived, they all met there and talked. The next time I looked, they were all leaving on a boat."

Palomeque said he had not seen any gunmen.

"It scares us when they say that stuff," said the 37-year-old father of 12, recalling that the entire village had to flee 15 years ago when it came under attack by right-wing paramilitaries.

An International Red Cross Committee car outside the ICRC office in Quibdo  Colombia  on November 20...
An International Red Cross Committee car outside the ICRC office in Quibdo, Colombia, on November 20, 2014
Luis Robayo, AFP

The attacks were sparked by an army corporal who had said that nine members of the since-disbanded paramilitaries had been captured "with the community's help."

Choco has been one of the regions hardest hit by the conflict, which has killed more than 220,000 people and caused more than five million to flee their homes since the FARC was founded in 1964.

Numerous rebel groups, drug gangs and illegal mining operations flourish in the hard-to-reach, densely forested department, whose population is overwhelmingly poor and black.

Local Catholic bishop Juan Barreto said that this year alone 8,000 people in the area had fled their homes to escape violence.

The highly anticipated handover of a general and four other hostages captured by FARC guerrillas got underway Thursday, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said, paving the way for the resumption of peace talks.

“The procedure is underway,” said the president, referring to the release of General Ruben Alzate and four other army captives being held by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

Colombia had suspended peace talks with the rebels over Alzate’s capture.

Officials provided few immediate details on the handover, saying only that a deal was reached Wednesday to free the hostages “as soon as possible.”

If the handover goes smoothly, Santos should be able to resume the two-year-old negotiations in Cuba on which he has staked his presidency.

“I’m going to give instructions for negotiators to return to Havana and continue talks, hopefully at a good pace, so they can finish this process as quickly as possible,” Santos said.

Picture released by Colombian Presidency press office shows Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos d...

Picture released by Colombian Presidency press office shows Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos during a televised speech in Bogota on November 17, 2014
, Presidencia/AFP

The Red Cross, which the government asked to intervene in the standoff, has a “green light” to oversee the hostages’ release, local spokeswoman Patricia Rey said.

The FARC for its part called its decision to release the hostages “a great gesture” that would save the talks.

“What we’re doing is a great gesture of peace, reconciliation, good will and commitment to the peace process,” said the guerrillas’ third in command, Jorge Torres Victoria, alias Pablo Catatumbo.

He repeated the FARC’s demand for a bilateral ceasefire to stop further “incidents of war” from derailing the negotiations.

The government has so far rejected calls for a ceasefire, which Santos argues would strengthen the rebels’ hand.

– Conflicting accounts of capture –

General Alzate, the head of an army task force charged with fighting rebels and drug traffickers in the jungle-covered department of Choco, is the highest-ranking officer to be captured by the FARC in 50 years of conflict.

He was taken hostage along with Corporal Jorge Rodriguez and army adviser Gloria Urrego as they traveled by boat to visit a civilian energy project in the remote western region.

Colombian Army General Rubén Alzate  who was kidnapped November 16  2014 in a jungle in Choco regio...

Colombian Army General Rubén Alzate, who was kidnapped November 16, 2014 in a jungle in Choco region, probably by FARC guerrillas, is shown in this file photo from August 15, 2014
Army Press Office, AFP/File

FARC fighters were already holding two other soldiers captured in combat in the eastern department of Arauca on November 9, Paulo Cesar Rivera and Jonathan Diaz.

Diplomats from Cuba and Norway, two of the countries acting as guarantors of the peace process, announced Wednesday that a deal had been struck to free all five hostages, but gave few details.

The defense ministry says Alzate, 55, was ambushed by armed guerrillas on arrival in the village of Las Mercedes.

But questions have emerged about why he was apparently traveling in civilian clothing and without a security escort.

Local residents denied Thursday that he had been ambushed, casting further uncertainty on an incident that derailed the controversial peace talks just as they reached their two-year anniversary Wednesday.

“Four men dressed in civilian clothes arrived in a boat about half an hour before the general,” said resident Presentacion Palomeque.

“They sat on the benches in front of the church. When the general and his companions arrived, they all met there and talked. The next time I looked, they were all leaving on a boat.”

Palomeque said he had not seen any gunmen.

“It scares us when they say that stuff,” said the 37-year-old father of 12, recalling that the entire village had to flee 15 years ago when it came under attack by right-wing paramilitaries.

An International Red Cross Committee car outside the ICRC office in Quibdo  Colombia  on November 20...

An International Red Cross Committee car outside the ICRC office in Quibdo, Colombia, on November 20, 2014
Luis Robayo, AFP

The attacks were sparked by an army corporal who had said that nine members of the since-disbanded paramilitaries had been captured “with the community’s help.”

Choco has been one of the regions hardest hit by the conflict, which has killed more than 220,000 people and caused more than five million to flee their homes since the FARC was founded in 1964.

Numerous rebel groups, drug gangs and illegal mining operations flourish in the hard-to-reach, densely forested department, whose population is overwhelmingly poor and black.

Local Catholic bishop Juan Barreto said that this year alone 8,000 people in the area had fled their homes to escape violence.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

Stop pretending to know what you’re talking about. You’re wrong and you know you’re wrong. So does everyone else.

Social Media

The US House of Representatives will again vote Saturday on a bill that would force TikTok to divest from Chinese parent company ByteDance.

Entertainment

Taylor Swift is primed to release her highly anticipated record "The Tortured Poets Department" on Friday.

Business

Two sons of the world's richest man Bernard Arnault on Thursday joined the board of LVMH after a shareholder vote.