Pubdate: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times Contact: Address: Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053 Fax: (213) 237-4712 Website: http://www.latimes.com/ Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/ Author: Juanita Darling, Times Staff Writer COLOMBIAN MILITARY AIDING DEATH SQUADS, REPORT SAYS MEDELLIN, Colombia - Military officers have continued to work directly with right-wing death squads despite government efforts to purge the armed forces of human rights violators, according to a report released Wednesday by Human Rights Watch/Americas. As recently as last year, three brigades led by officers considered to be among Colombia's most capable commanders provided information and weapons to private armies that carried out executions of civilians, the U.S.-based group charged. The report was made public as Congress debates a proposal for a $1.3-billion anti-narcotics aid package for Colombia that would include military hardware in a country plagued by a long-running civil war and a massive drug trade. "Far from moving decisively to sever ties to paramilitary groups ... evidence strongly suggests that Colombia's military high command has yet to take the necessary steps to accomplish this goal," the report concluded. Referring to the three battalions investigated, the report warned: "If Colombia's leaders cannot or will not halt these units' support for paramilitary groups, the government's resolve to end human rights abuse in units that receive U.S. security assistance must be seriously questioned." Gen. Fernando Tapias, commander of the Colombian armed forces, said: "I totally reject this attempt by Human Rights Watch to link the armed forces with outlaw groups. This is simply an attempt to block anti-narcotics aid." U.S. anti-drug czar Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, on a three-day visit to Colombia, said he recognizes that the country has "a huge human rights problem." But he noted: "The armed forces are making efforts to conform to the rule of law. [Human rights] complaints against the armed forces have gone downward to nearly zero." Still, the report charged, abuses by paramilitary groups have skyrocketed, often with the support of the army. Specifically, the report--based on information from the Colombian attorney general's office and independent informants--concluded that an army brigade posted in the city of Cali helped create a paramilitary organization financed by drug traffickers as recently as last year. And paramilitary groups near Medellin turned bodies of their victims over to military commanders who dressed them in uniforms and claimed them as combat casualties, the report charged. Brig. Gen. Jaime Ernesto Canal Alban, the army commander in Cali, labeled the report libelous. His 3rd Brigade is accused of organizing a paramilitary group called the Calima Front after members of the National Liberation Army, or ELN, Colombia's second-largest leftist guerrilla group, kidnapped 140 worshipers from a church in an upper-class Cali neighborhood in May. The brigade provided the paramilitary group with weapons and information, according to information developed by the Colombian attorney general's office and currently under seal, according to the report. "The Calima Front and the 3rd Brigade are the same thing," one investigator told Human Rights Watch. "Together, evidence collected so far by Human Rights Watch links half of Colombia's 18 brigade-level army units [excluding military schools] to paramilitary activity," the report stated. "Military support for paramilitary activity remains national in scope and includes areas where units receiving or scheduled to receive U.S. military aid operate." The Guardian Colombian troops accused of deep links with militias Martin Hodgson in Bogota Friday February 25, 2000 As the United States congress debates a massive increase in military aid to Colombia, a human rights report released yesterday alleges that the Colombian army maintains an intimate relationship with far-right paramilitaries and drug traffickers. According to Human Rights Watch, in recent years the army has worked hand in hand with militias funded by drug cartels, sharing intelligence, coordinating joint operations and providing arms, medical attention and ammunition. Soldiers have also committed armed robbery, abduction and murder, it claims. "Military support for paramilitary activity remains national in scope and includes areas where units receiving or scheduled to receive US military aid operate," the study by the Washington-based group concludes. The report coincides with a visit to Colombia by the White House's anti-drugs chief, Barry McCaffrey, a big supporter of a $1.6bn (A31bn) aid package designed to help Colombia combat the drugs trade and end a 36-year civil war. Direct US aid to the Colombian army was suspended in 1994 in response to military involvement in torture and other human rights abuses, but 80% of the new proposed package is military aid. Although US law forbids military aid to units involved in human rights abuses, observers say that the screening process is far from perfect. "All international security assistance should be conditioned on explicit actions by the Colombian government to sever links at all levels between the Colombian military and paramilitary groups,"the report says. President Andres Pastrana has stated his determination to stamp out corruption in the military, dismissing several high-ranking army officers. But a Human Rights Watch researcher, Robin Kirk, said: "It's clear that this activity continues. While it's true that direct military involvement in human rights abuses has decreased, the military continues to contract out abuses to paramilitary groups." Wednesday's report, which is based on interviews with witnesses and government investigators, focuses on three of the Colombian army's most prestigious brigades, operating in the capital Bogota, and the cities of Medellin and Cali. One witness, a former army intelligence officer who moonlighted as a cartel gunman, said that army officers set up a paramilitary group in Cali, south-west of Bogota, after leftwing rebels seized 140 worshippers from a Catholic church in May 1999. Between May and September the group is believed to have killed 40 people, and forced more than 2,000 from their homes. The witness described the difference between drug traffickers, paramilitaries and the Colombian army as "virtually non-existent". Few of those detailed in the report have come to trial in civil court and dozens of prosecutors have fled the country after receiving death threats. Colombia's paramilitary militias were founded by drug dealers and landowners in the 1980s to combat extortion and kidnapping by leftwing guerrillas. Rebels and paramilitaries rarely fight each other directly, instead targeting civilians they accuse of sympathising with their enemies. Last week 45 people were shot and hacked to death in a five-day killing spree by paramilitaries in the northern town of Ovejas. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D