Pubdate: Thu, 30 May 2002 Source: News Herald (FL) Copyright: 2002 The News Herald Contact: http://www.newsherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1018 Source: News-Herald(FL) STILL NOT OUR FIGHT Colombia: Presidential Vote Shows People Want Peace, And It's Up To Them To Achieve It Human rights organizations have reacted with shock and concern at the election of Alvaro Uribe Velez as Colombia's new president, according to many reports. An avowed hard-liner who promised to crack down on the brutal left-wing insurgents who have kept the nation mired in a 38-year civil war, Uribe won an unprecedented majority on the first round of elections, thus avoiding the usual run-off. His 53-percent majority suggests that the Colombian public is sick and tired of the leftist incursions that have led to 1 million people, out of a population of 40 million, being displaced from their homes. According to published reports, 3,500 people were killed in guerrilla fighting last year. Many villages exist in a no-man's land, where the government cannot protect them from rebel incursions. For instance, the left-wing FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) insurgents, with their 18,000-troop army, threatened to destroy entire villages if any residents voted in the recent elections. As the BBC reported, this month FARC rebels bombed a church where villagers were fleeing fighting - killing 119 people, mostly women and children. This backdrop helps explain why the Colombian people gave Uribe a strong showing, especially after the government of Andres Pastrana failed to achieve peace through concessions. The Pastrana approach essentially handed over 40 percent of the country to the rebels. FARC used the land to stage bigger and deadlier attacks. Along comes Uribe, who according to The Washington Post, "has become the most popular politician in the country by promising to double defense spending, give the military a freer hand, enlist civilians deeply in the war effort and perhaps call up as many as 30,000 reservists." Most controversial is his plan to reinstate neighborhood committees to help battle the rebels. Similar committees have been tied to right-wing paramilitaries, which often matched the rebels for brutality. We certainly understand the Colombian electorate's willingness to try an aggressive approach after a peaceful one failed, although we too fear an approach that tramples on human rights. Our main concern is Uribe's call for more American aid, not just to fight drug trafficking, but to fund direct military operations. We wish Uribe the best, but this is not America's fight. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)