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Colombian rebels free hostages in victory for Chavez
The Associated Press
Date: Thursday Jan. 10, 2008 3:21 PM ET
CARACAS, Venezuela Colombian rebels freed two women held hostage for more than five years, handing them over Thursday to Venezuelan officials who flew them toward Caracas where a triumphant President Hugo Chavez awaited.
Chavez said he spoke by telephone with the two women, Clara Rojas, an aide to former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, and former congresswoman Consuelo Gonzalez.
"I said hello to Clara and Consuelo, who were thrilled,'' he said.
The former captives were picked up by two helicopters and ferried them to an airstrip in the Venezuelan border town of Santo Domingo, where a few small passenger jets were waiting to ferry them on to Caracas.
The Red Cross, which was involved in the handover, confirmed that rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, had turned over the women.
It was the most important hostage release in the Colombian conflict since 2001, when the FARC freed some 300 soldiers and police officers. Chavez said he hopes the mission opens the way for the release of more hostages.
"Venezuela will continue opening the way for peace in Colombia. We are ready, and in contact with the FARC, and we hope the Colombian government understands. I'm sure they will understand,'' Chavez said. "The world wants peace for Colombia.''
Rojas was kidnapped in February 2002 while campaigning with Betancourt in a FARC-dominated region of southern Colombia. Gonzalez was abducted by the FARC in September 2001 near the city of Neiva.
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe authorized Venezuela to lead the rescue mission despite a bitter clash with Chavez over his involvement in Colombia's half-century-old guerrilla conflict.
In November, Uribe abruptly ended efforts by Chavez to broker a swap of 46 high-profile hostages -- including Betancourt and three U.S. defence contractors -- for hundreds of jailed rebels. He accused Chavez of unauthorized direct contacts with Colombia's military.
But relatives of the hostages urged Chavez to continue, and the FARC, which deeply distrusts Uribe, rewarded his efforts by offering to release the two women and Rojas's three-year old son, Emmanuel -- who was fathered in captivity by one of her guerrilla captors.
That fell through: The FARC accused Colombia's U.S.-backed military of sabotaging the handoff with operations in the area, while Uribe's government said the guerrillas backed out of the deal because they didn't have the child hostage.
Chavez immediately sided with the guerrillas, calling Uribe a "puppet'' and "lapdog'' of Washington. DNA tests later proved the rebels did not have Emmanuel, who has been in a Bogota foster home for more than two years.
Still, Uribe's government bent to domestic and international pressure to open its airspace for the new Venezuelan rescue mission and suspend military operations in a Vermont-sized slice of jungle in southeastern Guaviare state, a FARC stronghold.
Colombian Defence Minister Juan Manuel Santos said his troops held their fire as they saw the Venezuelan helicopters land about two kilometres from where they were stationed, adding that troops would wait until sundown before resuming operations.
"The minimum we can do is offer all sides the tranquility that we're going to respect all the ground rules,'' he said.
Rojas elderly mother, Clara Gonzalez de Rojas, was overcome with emotion as she spoke to Caracol TV from Caracas, where she's been waiting for three weeks to be reunited with her daughter.
"This is the biggest miracle God could have ever given me,'' Rojas said, holding back tears. "I'll be truly happy when I go with my daughter to retrieve my little grandson.''
Rojas said child welfare authorities assured her that Emmanuel "is in good health. He's a very loving baby, full of smiles, who inspires lots of tenderness -- beautiful for a child who in his short life has had to overcome so much.''
The U.S. administration, which has had tense relations with the leftist Chavez, welcomed the hostages' release and reiterated its call for the FARC to release all of its captives.
"We're pleased that the Colombian government has authorized the Venezuelan government to send aircraft to Colombia marked with International Red Cross logos and carrying an international commission to recover the hostages,'' said State Department spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos. "We call on the FARC to release all hostages that it holds and we continue to support President Uribe's efforts to that end.''
Gallegos had no comment about Chavez's involvement in the release.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who has pushed hard for the release of the French-Colombian Betancourt, said his country was "deeply overjoyed,'' adding: "This proves that things are moving, that the mobilization is bringing its first results. This commits us to boosting our efforts to bring the other hostages home.''
Yolanda Pulecio, Betancourt's mother, said she would fly to Caracas to see Rojas, and called the liberation proof that Chavez' methods work.
"It's necessary for the guerrillas to show the international community they're really interested in the fate of the hostages,'' she said.
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This short piece illustrates perfectly the problem with the adversarial legal system, where the idea of actual guilt is irrelevant to all participants in the pantomime. I support the vigorous defence of a person's rights, but also grasp why lawyers come across slimy. It's hard to look crystal clear and clean when you provide your services on a foundation of one set of acceptable lies against another.
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