Colombia: FARC should respect lives of captives
Amnesty International today re-iterated its call to the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia - FARC
(Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) to respect its commitments under international humanitarian law.
The organization's call comes after information emerged that three US citizens, apparently contracted by the US Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), may have been taken captive by the FARC following the crash of the plane they were travelling
in. The plane crashed close to Florencia, department of Caquetá in southern Colombia, an area with a heavy FARC
presence.
Two other men -- a US citizen, Jennis Thomas, and a Colombian army sergeant, Luis Alcides Cruz, -- were reportedly found
dead with bullet wounds. The Colombian authorities claim the latter were executed.
"If FARC guerrillas killed these men hors-de-combat, this would be a serious violation of international humanitarian
law," Amnesty International said.
With regards to the three other passengers, Amnesty International stated that if they are being held by FARC guerrilla
forces it is essential that their physical security is guaranteed and that they should have access to any medical
attention they may require.
Background
In recent years, the US administrations of Presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush have been providing the Colombian
security forces with increasing amounts of military aid. This aid, within the so-called Plan Colombia and subsequently
the Andean Regional Initiative aid package, was ostensibly for use in the "war on drugs". Yet the distinction between
the "war on drugs" and the counter-insurgency war against left-wing guerrilla groups -- of which the FARC is the largest
-- has been increasingly blurred.
Last year, the US administration secured congressional approval for lifting a previous requirement that limited aid to
counter-narcotics efforts so that military aid approved to date can also be used to combat activities by illegal armed
groups considered to be "terrorist" organizations including the FARC. The aid provided to the Colombian security forces
has included the provision of helicopters to military units, training and military aerial intelligence. Some of this aid
has been provided through companies sub-contracted by the US State Department, the Pentagon or the CIA.
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