Pubdate: Tue, 28 May 2002
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2002 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Section: International
Author: Juan Forero

COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT-ELECT SOFTENS TONE ON REBELS

BOGOTA, Colombia, May 27 - He won the presidency promising to crack down on 
leftist rebels, but today President-elect Alvaro Uribe Velez struck a 
conciliatory tone, holding out the possibility of negotiating with 
guerrilla commanders under United Nations mediation.

He told foreign journalists today that he hoped to set up a meeting with 
Secretary General Kofi Annan to discuss the possibility of initiating talks 
with the United Nations. Mr. Uribe also said that negotiations with a 
right-wing paramilitary group, bitter enemies of the rebels, were possible, 
a proposition his predecessors had declined to consider because of the 
widespread rights abuses perpetrated by the organization.

"We are going to look for general support for that initiative, and ask that 
the mission be completed by the United Nations," Mr. Uribe said.

"What mission?" he added. "The mission of establishing communications with 
the insurgent movement."

A United Nations official said the world organization was "following with 
great interest Mr. Uribe's statements regarding a future role for the 
United Nations in a new peace process."

Mr. Uribe's vice president-elect, Francisco Santos, said the idea was to 
"open the door" to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the 
country's largest and most powerful guerrilla organization.

Talks with the group were broken off by President Andres Pastrana in 
February, as a result of a wave of rebel aggressions.

The guerrillas did not have an immediate response to Mr. Uribe's victory on 
Sunday or his comments today.

But analysts who have closely followed Colombia's conflict saw Mr. Uribe's 
remarks today as an effort to assuage concerns in the United States and 
Europe about his hard-line reputation by casting himself as a moderate 
willing to talk peace.

The analysts noted that the rebels were virtually sure to turn down any 
chance to negotiate under Mr. Uribe's demands: that they first declare a 
cease-fire and end hostile actions like kidnappings.

The rebels would be further alienated by Mr. Uribe's proposal to include 
the paramilitaries in talks.

"This to defuse his critics who say, based on his campaign, that he is a 
warrior, not a peacemaker," said Larry Birns, director of the Council on 
Hemispheric Affairs, a Washington policy research group. "He has to 
communicate to the world that he is not Dr. Strangelove, that he's not 
going to blow up the country in the process of exterminating the guerrillas."

Mr. Birns, however, said there was little reason to believe that Mr. Uribe 
- - who cast himself as the candidate of the "hard hand" during the campaign 
- - would be committed to ensuring that negotiations reopened.

"He has to go through a pro-forma performance," Mr. Birns said, "so he will 
be able to say, `I've tried the negotiating card and it was not picked up."'

To be sure, the president-elect's main plank - to double the size of both 
the army's combat force and the National Police and create a million-member 
civilian force of informers - is seen by human rights groups as a dangerous 
plan that could lead to a wider war and increased rights abuses.

Mr. Uribe, however, says that Colombia is locked in a war against terrorism 
and should have the support of the international community. "Any country in 
a democratic world needs to have solidarity with the democratic society of 
Colombia, which is suffering this violence that is just terrorism," Mr. 
Uribe said in halting English.

During his campaign, Mr. Uribe was highly critical of President Pastrana's 
peace talks with rebels, which were held in the midst of a spiraling 
conflict and ultimately ended in failure. Mr. Pastrana did not ask for 
United Nations mediation during the talks, instead using peace negotiators 
from the organization as advisers to the two parties.

In the day since Mr. Uribe's election victory, congratulations have flowed 
in from the American ambassador, Anne Patterson, and other foreign 
officials. For many of them, Mr. Uribe's victory, by a margin that avoided 
a runoff for the first time in a decade, demonstrated unequivocal support 
for his proposals.

"The desire of the majority of the Colombian people has been to support the 
candidacy of Mr. Uribe," said Jose Salafranca, a Spaniard who led a mission 
of election observers from the European Community. "After yesterday's 
election, it is evident that he has enormous democratic legitimacy." For 
Mr. Uribe, remaining legitimate in the eyes of the world is crucial if his 
administration is to improve a slow-growing economy and receive the loans 
necessary to embark on various government programs.

Mr. Uribe, 49, who has studied at Harvard and Oxford, said he was counting 
on continued support from the United States to eradicate illegal drug crops 
and to deal with the rebels. The United States already helps Colombia on 
the drug war, but the Bush administration is trying to expand aid for 
counterguerrilla operations.

"We need the help of the United States in order to preserve our democracy," 
Mr. Uribe said. "And to preserve our democracy, we can no longer suffer 
from terrorism."

The president-elect also stressed the need to work closely with Colombia's 
neighbors on security issues.

Drug trafficking and the conflict often spill over Colombia's borders, 
particularly into Venezuela and Ecuador, with guerrillas and drug 
traffickers crossing frontiers.

"If this is not resolved, this conflict has the dangerous potential of 
destabilizing Latin America," he said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens