Pubdate: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2000 Associated Press Author: Margarita Martinez, Associated Press Writer SUMMIT ADDRESSES COLOMBIAN STRIFE BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- As Colombia's war widens and becomes more savage, representatives of the government, two rebel groups and dozens of humanitarian organizations meet in Central America this week to figure ways to ease the conflict. While the three-day conference, which starts Monday evening in San Jose, Costa Rica, is not expected to produce any breakthroughs to end Colombia's 36-year war, it is unique because it places most of the participants at the same table. ``We believe this meeting is crucial because it provides the space for civil society to be heard by all sides, including the rebels, so that a real peace can be negotiated,'' Robin Kirk of Human Rights Watch said in a telephone interview Friday from Washington. The conference is also likely to become a forum for many groups to voice their opposition to President Andres Pastrana's U.S.-backed anti-narcotics offensive. The so-called Plan Colombia, being financed with $1.3 billion in mostly military aid from Washington, is aimed at wiping out cocaine- and heroin-producing crops from rebels and other armed groups that protect them. ``A modification of Plan Colombia (is needed) because the way is it envisioned does not help the country,'' said Jorge Rojas of Colombia Peace, an umbrella group of local non-governmental organizations. Many NGOs expect the anti-drug offensive, which is expected to be launched within months after U.S. special forces troops finish training two Colombian army battalions and U.S. helicopters are deployed, will intensify the war and force thousands to abandon their homes in southern Colombia, where most of the world's cocaine is produced. International human-rights groups such as Human Rights Watch and representatives from the United Nations also said they would attend the conference. Representing the government will be the ministers of labor, of development and of the environment, who will discuss the social aspects of Plan Colombia. Under the plan, Pastrana hopes to boost social programs in the undeveloped region. However, the hundreds of millions of dollars in contributions from European nations that Colombia hoped to obtain have not materialized, and the government will be hard-pressed to provide its own financing. Representatives of the two rebel groups -- the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, and the National Liberation Army, or ELN -- said they would attend the conference. However, a right-wing paramilitary group, the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, was not invited because it lacks political status and is not engaged in peace talks with the government. The conference comes as the government's separate peace talks with the FARC and ELN have stagnated and as Colombia's war has grown ever more savage in recent months. Through August of this year, 314 massacres have been carried out by rebels and the paramilitary forces in which 1,389 people have been slain. That was expected to be a focus of the workshops of the conference. ''(We must) immediately begin to agree on respect for human rights and reach an agreement in this sense,'' said Development Minister Augusto Ramirez. Also on the agenda: discussions on the status of peace talks, the economic crisis, the anti-drug war and international aid. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck