Society
4th captive freed by Colombian rebels
Updated: 2011-02-15 07:56
(China Daily)
Colombian police officer Carlos Alberto Ocampo (center) waves as he is reunited with his family upon arriving at Bogota's army airport of Catam, after he was released as a hostage by Colombian FARC rebels on Sunday. Jose Miguel Gomez / Reuters |
BOGOTA, Colombia - Colombian rebels released a fourth captive on Sunday, but a planned handover of two others did not occur. The government said the men were not at the location designated for the helicopter retrieval by the International Red Cross.
Former senator Piedad Cordoba, the go-between in all 18 releases by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, since early 2008, did not offer an explanation except to say via Twitter that she was "certain we will soon see them freed".
She wrote from Ibague, a provincial capital in Colombia's central cordillera, the staging area for Sunday's missions. The Red Cross also did not elaborate.
The government's delegate, Eduardo Pizarro, told reporters that after picking up police patrolman Carlos Ocampo, a 30-year-old held since December, the loaned Brazilian military helicopter emblazoned with Red Cross logos went to a different jungle location whose coordinates had been provided to Cordoba by the FARC.
Pizarro said "the FARC has committed a scandalous act".
He said it "is committed to the liberation" of police Major Guillermo Solorzano, 35, who was captured in June 2007, and of army corporal 1st Class Salin Antonio San Miguel Valderrana, 27, captive since May 2008.
The FARC now holds fewer than 20 police and soldiers, whose freedom it has proposed exchanging for that of jailed rebels.
Badly battered by government air raids and record desertions during President Juan Manuel Santos' 2006-2009 tenure as defense minister, the Western Hemisphere's last remaining rebel army is also seeking a dialogue that might open a path to peace talks.
Santos on criticized what he termed the "media show" surrounding the FARC rebels' piecemeal liberations this week.
The first in nearly a year, they began on Wednesday with the release of a town councilman and continued on Friday when the guerrillas freed another councilman and a young soldier. Santos called the releases a "farce" because the FARC continues to kidnap people and won't cease hostilities.
In an interview published on Sunday by with Semana magazine, the president also said that "no one in this government is authorized to make any contact of any kind with the FARC".
Analysts have suggested that if any contact were made it would be secret and through third parties.
AP
E-paper
Ear We Go
China and the world set to embrace the merciful, peaceful year of rabbit
Preview of the coming issue
Carrefour finds the going tough in China
Maid to Order
Specials
Mysteries written in blood
Historical records and Caucasian features of locals suggest link with Roman Empire.
Winning Charm
Coastal Yantai banks on little things that matter to grow
New rules to hit property market
The State Council launched a new round of measures to rein in property prices.