The Heirs: The History and Future of Death Squads in Colombia
Right-wing paramilitaries, the heirs of the infamous death squads, have started to re-emerge in Colombia.
Published on Monday, September 13, 2010 by Al-Jazeera-English
In recent years, the image of Colombia has changed - particularly since Alvaro Uribe, the country's former president, took office in 2002. The notorious left-wing group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), has been weakened, paramilitary groups have been disarmed and cocaine production has dropped.
But this new image does not reflect the reality in rural villages and towns, where people continue to live at war and the FARC are just one of many threats they face.
It is in these places - far away from the improved security seen in Colombia's main cities - where the former paramilitary group, the Self Defense Units of Colombia, also known as the AUC, have been replaced by smaller but equally dangerous groups.
These groups are referred to as the heirs of the AUC, which was tasked with fighting left-wing rebels. Their method, known as 'draining the water to kill the fish', involved carrying out massacres of innocent civilians and provoking mass displacement. Human rights groups say they may have been responsible for the deaths and disappearances of at least 120,000 people.(SNIP)
...(Uribe) negociated a truce with the AUC, with 30,000 men handing over their weapons in a televised ceremony.
The Justice and Peace Law, which offered reduced sentences to paramilitary members in return for information on the atrocities they committed, was also passed.
But, travelling around Colombia, we met people who spoke about groups with names like the Black Eagles and the Ratsrojos.
They said the faces were the same as those they used to see and that the men who had handed their weapons in to Uribe's government had simply moved on to these smaller, but equally as dangerous, groups.(MORE)
(my emphases)
http://www.commondreams.org/video/2010/09/10-0----------------------------
The FARC
never killed civilians on the scale that the Colombian military and its death squads have done. In fact, Amnesty International attributes 92% of the murders of trade unionists to the Colombian military itself (about half) and to its closely tied rightwing paramilitary death squads (the other half). The FARC, 2%. A UN human rights report has a similar breakdown. So, to say that, "... the reality in rural villages and towns, where people continue to live at war and
the FARC are just one of many threats they face," is to misstate the relative threats presented by the fascist forces (Colombian military and death squads) and the leftist guerrilla fighters, the FARC. And, indeed, most of the half a million poor Colombians who have fled into Venezuela and Ecuador have been seeking refuge
from the Colombian military--and are a portion of 5 MILLION mostly poor Colombian peasants who have been driven from their lands by state terror, including official Colombian military terror and that of their rightwing paramilitary death squads.
Another important fact that is not mentioned is that the U.S./Bushwhack government larded this murderous Colombian military with $7 BILLION in military aid, plus thousands of U.S. military 'advisors' and U.S. military 'contractors' (including Blackwater--which the State Department recently "fined" for its "unauthorized" "trainings" of Colombians for use in Iraq and Afghanistan), and was likely providing Uribe with high tech spying capabilities, by which he created "lists" of trade unionists and others that were likely used for targeting by the death squads. Uribe publicly stated that all who oppose him are "terrorists."
On the so-called "truce" that Uribe negotiated with the AUC death squads--i.e., reduced sentences for information: Last year, with U.S./Bushwhack ambassador William Brownfield's help, Uribe secretly extradited all the main informants to the U.S., where they were charged with mere drug trafficking and their cases completely sealed by the U.S. court in Washington DC--putting them out of the reach of Colombian prosecutors, who were counting on their testimony for further indictments, particularly of the big bosses (probably including Uribe himself--some 70 of whose closest political cohorts are under investigation or already in jail for several crimes including close ties to the death squads). The prosecutors were given no notice. They have strongly objected but there is little or nothing they can do now. So much for this "truce" providing information.
The gist of the article is that the rightwing death squads never demobilized, but merely reorganized into smaller death squad structures that are still the terror of the countryside. This is true in so far as it goes, and the reporters may have made a decision to limit the scope of their article largely to what they could see and hear traveling in Colombia. That is certainly good journalistic practice but it can lead to error if important contextual points are left out--for instance, AI's report that about half of the murders of trade unionists have been committed by the Colombian military itself. This points to a much bigger problem than rogue death squads. It points to GOVERNMENT--both Colombian and U.S.--ENCOURAGEMENT of the murder of anybody opposed to the government. The civilians murdered have including human rights workers, teachers, community activists, political leftists, trade unionists, journalists, peasant farmers and random young people, murdered and then dressed up like FARC guerrillas to up the Colombian military's "body count" (in the infamous "false positives" scandal). It has included throwing the bodies in mass graves, for instance the one recently discovered in La Macarena, Colombia, containing 500 to 2,000 unidentified bodies, whom local people say were local community activists and members. La Macarena was also an area of special interest and activity by the U.S. military and the USAID.
There is much to worry about, including possible U.S. military complicity in the murder of civilians. The continuation of the rightwing death squads, in smaller units, is only part of it. And the FARC--though they have murdered people--are nothing like the threat to the Colombian people posed by its own military, funded by the U.S., and by the country's leadership, including current President Manuel Santos.
The article ends on the note of hope that Santos might call off the rich elite's death squads. I don't have the hope that Santos will bring anything but a temporary peace in wait for the next Bush Junta to be Diebolded into the White House. I think that the cleansing of the countryside of its local community and political leadership is likely preparation for a wider war--Oil War II--against neighboring Venezuela and Ecuador. At the least, it has been preparation for U.S. "free trade for the rich"--creation of a terrorized slave labor force (millions of poor peasants driven from their lands into urban squalor) and destruction of any will among Colombians to control and benefit from their own resources, land and labor.