Report from  this week's AP/RN (Sinn Fein's weekly newspaper).

An Phoblacht/Republican News -27 November 1997 

Colombian death squads kill 21

By Dara Mac Neil

Having adopted a relatively low profile in recent months, the forces of law 
and order in Colombia have resumed their murder campaign with vigour.

They were particularly busy last weekend, meting out summary justice to 
21 people in two separate incidents of mass murder. 

In the town of Tocaima - sixty miles from the capital Bogota - a dozen 
armed men took 14 men and women from their homes and shot them dead in 
broad daylight. Although they wore masks, such is the confidence with 
which these killers operate, that they didn't even bother removing their 
army uniforms.

The following day armed men boarded a bus elsewhere in Colombia. Having 
selected seven people from amongst those on board the killers then 
murdered their victims on the roadside. 

Such is the reality of day-to-day life in `democratic' Colombia. 

The killings illustrate the eagerness of the Colombian state to prosecute 
its dirty war against the citizenry. As with other such campaigns - in El 
Salvador, Guatemala, Argentina, Chile - the victims are overwhelmingly 
civilian.

On each occasion, the only charge levelled against the dead is one of mere 
`suspicion' - that is, the suspicion that they are not wholeheartedly devoted 
and loyal to Colombia's ruling elite. Any deviation is likely to result in a 
death sentence. Thus, one of those murdered in the latest violence was an 
official of the wholly legal Communist Party.

For others, the crime may simply be a matter of geography. The people of 
Tocaima, where 14 were murdered, have long been classed as political 
deviants. Their crime is to inhabit an area which is said to have close links 
to the rebel Armed Revolutionary Forces of Colombia (FARC).

As if people exercise much choice over where they live, in a country that is 
rife with poverty and social inequality and where conflict and death squad 
activity have forced one million to flee their homes, and become refugees in 
their own land.

The decision to carry out a public massacre in Tocaima was no more than a 
simple exercise in state terror. The intention is to ensure that the local 
populace will now be too terrified to either help, aid or support the FARC 
guerrillas.

The killers use of masks will prevent individuals being identified, while the 
wearing of army uniforms will have relayed to the people of Tocaima that 
the Colombian state terror machine operates with impunity.

Thus, in July members of a right-wing death squad took over the small town 
of Mapiripan. For five long days they terrorised and murdered as the whim 
took them. The final death toll was thirty. Each victim's throat had been 
slashed and their corpses dumped in a nearby river. 

Shortly afterwards, another seven people were murdered in the towns of 
Segovia and Remedios. The killings occurred close to a lucrative gold mine 
which, because of its worth to the government, is heavily guarded by the 
army. Indeed, the general area is itself heavily militarised. Yet the killers 
were never caught. The parallels with Algeria are obvious.

Less than a month ago, as reported on these pages, Colombia's current 
President Ernesto Samper made an extraordinary public admission. Samper - 
whose electoral victory was achieved with the aid of drug money donations 
- told a Colombian paper that members of the armed forces were 
sympathetic to the country's network of death squads. 

However, he went on to deny any direct link between the two. Unfortunately 
for Mr Samper the evidence says otherwise. 

According to the European Conference on Human Rights, an average of seven 
people have been assassinated daily in Colombia since 1988. The vast 
majority of those deaths are attributable to the country's security forces 
and/or death squads - both being interchangeable entities.

Few if any killers have been caught or prosecuted and the army has being 
doing its level best to ensure that this pattern persists. 

For example, one proposal currently being discussed would abolish the 
power of public prosecutors and the country's Attorney General to 
investigate members of the armed forces. The proposal has won support in 
the country's parliament.

The anxiety of the armed forces to prevent investigation is understandable. 
In 1991, Colombian military intelligence was re- organised. This process 
was outlined in what is now known as Order 200-05/91.

In essence, Order 200 established the complex network of death squads and 
army assassins that prevails to this day. 

This was confirmed last year by the organisation Human Rights Watch. Their 
report stated that: ``The military-paramilitary (death squad) association 
forms part of the current Colombian reality. 

Human Rights Watch has been able to prove that the collaboration between 
military intelligence, military commanders at division, brigade, (and) 
battalion level continues, as envisaged by Order 200- 05/91.''

The report went on: ``We believe that the staff of the Colombian armed 
forces continues to organise, encourage and mobilise the paramilitaries in a 
hidden war against those suspected of supporting the guerrillas.''

One of the factors behind Order 200-05/91 was a fear among the Colombian 
military that they could not operate with complete impunity indefinitely. 
Thus they needed allies, or proxies. 

In right-wing, fascistic paramilitary groupings (many organised by the 
major drug cartels) they found the perfect candidates. 

Thus, it should come as no major surprise that, in recent years, murders 
carried out directly by the armed forces have declined, while the number of 
killings carried out by the death-squads has risen. 

According to Pablo Restrepo, a Colombian human rights activist, there is a 
connection between the two figures. 

Indeed, Restrepo goes so far as to state that there is an ``almost perfect'' 
correlation between ``the reduction of abuses directly attributable to 
government forces and the increase in abuses directly imputable to 
paramilitary bands.''

Makes perfect sense.
_____________________________
 
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