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[Marxism] Colombia: French Negotiators were to meet Reyes the Day he was killed
COLOMBIA:
French Negotiators Were to Meet Reyes the Day He Was Killed
Kintto Lucas
QUITO, Mar 7 (IPS) - Three personal envoys of French President
Nicolas Sarkozy, who were in Ecuador since October 2007, were phoned
Saturday Mar. 1 by Colombian Peace Commissioner Luis Carlos Restrepo,
who warned them not to go to a meeting with guerrilla leader Raúl
Reyes because they would be in danger.
Sarkozy’s envoys in Ecuador, who were there with the consent of
Colombian President Álvaro Uribe, were negotiating with Reyes the
release of former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt,
who has been held hostage by the guerrillas for six years, said a
French diplomatic source who wished not to be named.
The source told IPS that the three French negotiators were in a town
near the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) camp that was
bombed by the Colombian military in the wee hours of Saturday
morning. The raid, carried out three kilometres from the Colombian
border, killed Reyes -- the rebel group’s international spokesman --
and around two dozen other insurgents.
The envoys were on their way to a meeting that morning with Reyes,
who was actually already dead, when they received Restrepo’s phone
call warning them not to approach the contact point, for their own
safety.
When Colombia announced that Reyes had been killed, the French
government expressed its displeasure. Foreign Minister Bernard
Kouchner told the press that "It’s bad news that the man we were
talking to is dead."
The rebel leader was France’s contact in the negotiations for the
release of Betancourt, a French-Colombian citizen, which Sarkozy has
made a top priority of his government.
Last month, another Sarkozy envoy met with Restrepo, who gave his
word that he backed the negotiations for the release of the ailing
Betancourt.
On Monday, Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa reported that the
aerial bombing raid on the FARC camp had frustrated the unilateral
release of 12 hostages, including Betancourt, which was to take place
in Ecuador this month. He said "the talks were quite advanced."
Complaining that the attack had foiled the planned hostage handover,
he said "We cannot discount that this was one of the reasons for the
incursion and attack by the enemies of peace."
The list of hostages to be released this month reportedly included
Colombian army officers and non-commissioned officers Juan Carlos
Bermeo, Raimundo Malagón, Arbey Delgado, and Pablo Moncayo, police
officers Luis Mendieta, Edgar Duarte and Julián Guevara, and an
Ecuadorian policeman, Marcelino Arreaga.
The Uribe administration admitted that the Colombian military had
made an incursion into Ecuadorian territory, but accused Ecuador and
Venezuela of illegal ties with the FARC. As proof, it provided
documents which, according to Colombian officials, were found on
laptops in Reyes’ camp.
Ecuadorian Security Minister Gustavo Larrea acknowledged that he had
met in January with Reyes, "outside of Ecuador and Colombia," and
said he spoke with him only about the release of the hostages as part
of an effort brokered by several governments.
France, Switzerland and Spain form part of a group of countries
attempting to facilitate talks between the Colombian government and
the FARC, to negotiate a humanitarian exchange of hostages for
imprisoned guerrillas.
Mediation efforts by Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez secured the
unilateral release of six hostages by the FARC in January and February.
On Tuesday, the FARC secretariat issued a communiqué stating that
Reyes "was killed carrying out a mission to arrange, through
President Chávez, an interview with President Sarkozy, aimed at
moving forward in the search for solutions to the situation of Ingrid
Betancourt and the objective of the humanitarian exchange."
The FARC also thanked presidents "Hugo Chávez, Nicolás Sarkozy,
Rafael Correa, Daniel Ortega (of Nicaragua), Cristina Fernández (of
Argentina), Evo Morales (of Bolivia) and all governments that want
peace, the families of the prisoners (hostages), and the immense
majority who support the exchange."
Betancourt’s ex-husband, French diplomat Fabrice Delloye, told the
press Tuesday that Uribe’s attitude was "disgusting" and "ignoble"
and that he had "consistently sabotaged" any chance of securing the
hostages’ release.
According to Delloye, when Uribe was in France a month ago, he urged
Sarkozy to resume, along with Switzerland and Spain, the talks with
Reyes, the only FARC representative authorised to discuss a
humanitarian hostages-for-prisoners swap.
He also said that in Panama last week, Peace Commissioner Restrepo
once again encouraged the French envoys to meet with Reyes.
"President Uribe had been perfectly aware for a long time of the
location of Raúl Reyes, and he also knew that President Correa,
through Minister Larrea, had strictly humanitarian relations with
Reyes to try to solve the problem of the hostages," said Delloye.
The negotiations between French envoys and Reyes had been going on
for several years, and were aborted more than once due to
intervention by the Colombian government, as IPS has reported in the
past.
Diplomatic sources with direct knowledge of the negotiations told IPS
that in June 2003 two French Foreign Ministry officials were going to
meet with Reyes to receive documents proving that Betancourt was
still alive, since her family had not received any "proof of life"
since May 2002.
France’s interest was to clarify doubts with respect to Betancourt’s
health, and the FARC was interested in re-establishing contact with
the international community.
A high level French Foreign Ministry official was to take part in the
meeting. At the same time, Delloye was to receive a video recording
of Betancourt taped in early June 2003.
But through the tapping of telephone lines, the Uribe administration
learned about and frustrated the planned meeting, according to
several sources who spoke to IPS. The video was finally broadcast in
August that year by a local Colombian TV channel.
Although he said he was unaware of the negotiations with Reyes at the
time, then French ambassador in Ecuador, Serge Pinot, told IPS that
Paris would continue doing everything possible and would make "the
necessary contacts at every level" to secure Betancourt’s release.
A diplomatic source in Bogotá, who preferred not to be named, said on
that occasion that behind the frustration of the operation were "U.S.
special services, working in coordination with Colombian military
intelligence and President Uribe."
The aim, he said, was to block the FARC’s efforts at negotiations.
Another significant incident occurred in January 2004, when FARC
negotiator Simón Trinidad was arrested in Ecuador in a joint
Colombian-U.S. intelligence operation carried out in cooperation with
the Ecuadorian police.
According to a communiqué issued after the arrest by the FARC,
Trinidad was carrying out a mission to arrange a suitable venue for a
meeting with then United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan and his
personal representative in Colombia, James LeMoyne.
The FARC said Trinidad’s arrest also aborted a planned meeting with
representatives of the French government, which was to come up with a
definitive solution to the hostage problem.
And in December 2004, Rodrigo Granda, known as the FARC’s "foreign
minister", was kidnapped by Colombian security forces, with "the
possible participation of high-level Venezuelan government agents and
officials," as the rebel leader himself stated in an interview from
prison that was published on the insurgent group’s web site.
Granda’s capture also thwarted local and international efforts for a
humanitarian hostage-prisoner swap, as Betancourt’s husband, Juan
Carlos Lecompte, said in February.
Lecompte said Uribe knew that Granda, who lived in Venezuela, was the
contact for the hostages’ families and for international bodies
working for a hostage-prisoner exchange, like the United Nations, the
Red Cross, and the French and Swiss governments.
"Granda had contacts with the Swiss and they were arranging or
starting a process for a humanitarian accord with the FARC. Uribe
found out, and had him arrested," Lecompte told the Caracol TV news
programme in Colombia. (END/2008)
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