 |
|
Lorenzo Betancourt (L), the son of
kidnapped former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt,
Fabrice Delloye, Betancourt's former husband and Colombia's President
Alvaro Uribe (R) meet in Paris Jan. 20, 2008. Colombia's rebel group the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) has no intention of freeing
its top hostages, a guerrilla that defected from the group told local
radio Monday. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
|
BOGOTA, March 10
(Xinhua) -- Colombia's rebel group the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) has no intention of freeing its top hostages, a guerrilla that defected
from the group told local radio Monday.
Pablo Montoya had been a member of the FARC for 16
years until he killed his immediate superior, the group's number-seven official
Ivan Rios, last Friday for a 2.6-million-U.S. dollar reward.
Montoya turned himself in to authorities, carrying
the severed hand of Rios, saying he killed Rios and his girlfriend.
Montoya said the FARC would hold trials for the three
U.S. contractors currently held captive, in the same way that the United States
had tried FARC fighters Omaira Rojas Cabrera, alias Sonia, and Juvenal Ovidio
Ricardo Palmera Pineda, alias Simon Trinidad.
Former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid
Betancourt, who a former hostage said was very ill, will not be freed because
she is "a very rebellious lady," he added.
Betancourt, kidnapped in 2002, is currently held in
southern Colombia's rainforest, he said. Former senator Oscar Lizcano, who has
also been held since 2002, is in the west or northwest of the nation, in the
hands of the Aurelio Rodriguez front.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has expressed
concern about the fate of Betancourt, who has French nationality.
Sarkozy has offered to personally bring her back to
France to her awaiting family should she be released.
The FARC has released six people since the start of
the year to Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez, who acted as mediator between the
FARC and the Colombian government from August to November last year, until
Colombia's government ended his role saying he had broken with protocol.
Last week, the FARC turned over videos and other
evidence showing that Betancourt and 10 other hostages are still alive.
Chavez calls for fresh efforts on FARC
hostage crisis
SANTO DOMINGO, March 7 (Xinhua) -- Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez on Friday called for the resumption of efforts to bring about the
release of hostages held by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
A multi-national commission should be set up for their
release if necessary, Chavez said at the 20th Rio Group Summit in the Dominican
Republic's capital Santo Domingo. Full story
French president urges FARC to release
Betancout
 |
|
Lorenzo Betancourt (2nd R), the son of kidnapped former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, speaks as Fabrice Delloye, Betancourt's former husband (R), Valerie Pecresse (L), Minister for Higher Education and Research, listen during a gathering in front of Sciences Po school in Paris March 6, 2008. French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Wednesday urged the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) to release French-Colombian hostage Ingrid Betancourt. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
PARIS, March 5 (Xinhua) -- French President Nicolas
Sarkozy on Wednesday urged the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) to
release French-Colombian hostage Ingrid Betancourt.
Sarkozy said he had taped an appeal to be shown on
Colombian television urging the release of Betancourt, a former Colombian
presidential candidate who was seized by rebels six years ago, Le Figaro daily
reported. Full story
Ecuador withdraws ambassador from
Colombia
QUITO, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The Ecuadorian government
ordered on Sunday to withdraw its ambassador from Colombia, Francisco Suescum,
saying it was protesting "a transgression of the principles of sovereignty and
territorial integrity" by Colombia's army.
Jose Valencia, Ecuador's deputy foreign minister, told
media that the measure does not imply the end of a relationship with its
northern neighbor, because trade links remain intact. Full story
Radio: NO. 2 leader of FARC
killed
 |
|
Senior Colombian rebel commander Raul
Reyes gestures during an interview with Reuters in Los Pozos province,
south of Colombia, in this May 13, 2001 file photo. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BOGOTA, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The Colombian military killed
a top member of the country's largest anti-government group in an air-and-ground
raid Saturday, said the government.
Raul Reyes, one of the seven-member secretariat of the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC), was killed in an attack on a jungle camp across the
Colombia-Ecuador border, in which 16 other FARC members and one Colombian
military soldier were also left dead, Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos told
reporters. Full story
Colombia's FARC guerrilla hands over
four legislators to Venezuela
BOGOTA, Feb. 27 (Xinhua) -- Colombia's Revolutionary Armed
Forces (FARC) handed over on Wednesday four former legislators to a Venezuelan
government and International Red Cross mission (ICRC).
The four former legislators Luis Perez, Orlando Beltran,
Eduardo Gechem and Gloria Polanco were picked up by Venezuelan helicopters in a
rural zone called La Poderosa in Guaviare department, southeast of Colombia at
12:10 p.m. local time (1710 GMT). Full story