Pubdate: Sun, 01 Oct 2000 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company Contact: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Scott Wilson, Washington Post Foreign Service INFLUX BURDENS VENEZUELA LA PISTA, Colombia - The gunmen came for Henry Fernandez on a still, sweltering afternoon. Wearing the signature white shoulder patches of the paramilitary forces that roam this region of northeastern Colombia, they walked him out of his corner store and down the rutted road through town. Fernandez, a 38-year-old husband and father, did not struggle when the 40 or so militiamen marched him before neighbors who had gathered to see the commotion. When it became clear he was to die, several witnesses said, Fernandez made a break for the lush jungle along the roadside. He was shot in the head three times at 3 p.m. on Aug. 22, and his body was left in the center of the street. "Everyone saw it," said Antonio Quintana, 18, a yucca farmer who watched Fernandez die and whose cousin was drowned by paramilitary troops. "I was afraid that I was next. But then they left, disappeared." So has most of this town, located hard against the Rio de Oro, which these days serves as Colombia's swift, muddy border with Venezuela. La Pista sits midway between Caracas and Bogota, roughly 350 miles from each capital, in a steamy tropical region controlled by Colombia's leftist guerrillas and menaced by the right-wing paramilitary groups that have sworn to eliminate them. The Fernandez killing prompted the latest exodus from this town, where only several dozen families remain. Their neighbors fled by canoe across the river, joining tens of thousands of their countrymen who have quietly colonized western Venezuela over the past decade and turned many of its towns into Colombian sanctuaries. The impending $1.3 billion U.S. anti-drug package has changed the landscape not only in Colombia, where paramilitary groups and guerrillas are moving quickly and savagely to consolidate positions, but also in Venezuela and other bordering countries, which have fortified frontiers and warned of a coming storm. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has sharply criticized the military component of the aid package, saying it will increase bloodshed in Colombia and force the conflict into neighboring countries. So a Colombian diaspora that has been tacitly welcomed for years has become the subject of great concern within Venezuela, once the most accommodating of Colombia's neighbors. It has brought increased army patrols along the river and calls from human rights groups for Chavez to soften what has been largely a military response to a nascent refugee crisis. Between 500 and 1,500 Colombians, most from La Pista, have arrived on the Venezuelan side of the Rio de Oro since Fernandez was killed. Some of the refugees have been intercepted by stepped-up army patrols and returned. But most of them have blended into such nearby Venezuelan towns as El Cruce, Casigua and Machiques, where Colombians compose the majority of the population. The number of refugees is difficult to pinpoint, but Venezuelan special forces officers who patrol the river say the most recent migration from Colombia is not the largest of recent years. In May 1999, when paramilitary groups slaughtered hundreds of residents of La Gabarra, a few hours by mule from here, thousands of Colombians crossed the river. According to several Venezuelan soldiers who witnessed the exodus, headless bodies from the massacre also made the trip downstream. The recent Colombian migration has unsettled residents of many Venezuelan conservative frontier towns. A commander of a local Venezuelan special forces patrol said Colombian kidnapping rings have formed in recent months, seizing Venezuelan ranchers and selling them to guerrillas on the other side of the river. A Venezuelan trucker was killed recently in Colombia by the National Liberation Army, a small leftist guerrilla group, provoking a war of words between Bogota and Caracas. "For sale" signs are common on property within 12 miles of the river. In the Venezuelan city of Machiques, where the Colombian consulate estimates that 80 percent of the 100,000 residents are Colombian, resentment is building as the migration picks up steam. A group of ranchers chatting in Plaza Bolivar said Colombians bring "kidnappings, disease and drugs" to the town and its outskirts, where most of the migrants live. One called them "scum." Jose Marquez, 24, lifted his shirt to display the pistol stuck in his pants by way of explaining his personal security plan. "It depends on the government to solve this problem," said Euclides Melia, 48, a livestock trader. "They need to organize something to handle this." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D