Pubdate: Tue, 19 Mar 2002 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2002 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Michael Hedges Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/colombia.htm (Colombia) GUERRILLAS CHARGED WITH DRUG TRAFFICKING FARC Members Face U.S. Charges WASHINGTON -- Three Colombians who the United States said are members of an anti-government guerrilla movement were charged with drug trafficking by the U.S. Justice Department in an indictment unsealed Monday. The Colombians, charged with running a cocaine smuggling operation whose ultimate customers were in the United States, are members of FARC, a Marxist group that has battled the Colombian government for decades, according to the Justice Department. The indictment is the first time the United States has formally charged FARC members with drug trafficking. It comes as the Bush administration is expected to ask Congress to lift restrictions preventing U.S. aid to Colombia from being used against guerrilla groups. That aid is now restricted for use against narco-trafficking groups in Colombia. "The indictment marks the convergence of two of the top priorities of the Department of Justice, the prevention of terrorism and the reduction of illegal drug use," said Attorney General John Ashcroft. The three FARC members indicted included Tomas Molina Caracas, who the Justice Department said commands FARC's 16th Front. According to U.S. officials, the 16th Front controls a city in eastern Colombia called Barranco Minas where there is an airstrip that is a key point of departure for cocaine processed in the region from locally grown coca leaves. Along with the three alleged FARC members, four other men, including three Brazilians, were also indicted on drug trafficking charges. One of the Brazilians, Luis Fernando da Costa, was arrested in Colombia last April and deported to Brazil, where he is being held. The Department of Justice will attempt to extradite all seven for trial on charges of conspiracy to import cocaine into the United States from Colombia, Ashcroft said. The indictment said Molina commanded a base near the Venezuelan border where cocaine was collected from various units in the 16,000-man FARC army, then shipped through Venezuela and Brazil to Europe and the United States. "The 16th Front processed cocaine, collected cocaine from other FARC fronts, and sold it to international drug traffickers for payment in currency, weapons and equipment," Ashcroft said. While focused on members of a specific FARC group, the indictment charged that several other "fronts" or guerrilla units within FARC were involved in drug trafficking. "It is our hope that this indictment will lead to the law being victorious over lawlessness in Colombia and to break up an organization that has targeted the United States for the deadly drug of cocaine," said Drug Enforcement Administrator Asa Hutchinson. If extradicted to the United States and convicted, the alleged drug traffickers would face life in prison. But U.S. officials admitted that it will be difficult to apprehend the FARC guerrillas, who are part of a Marxist group that has battled the Colombian government for 40 years. On Friday, Bush officials said the administration would ask Congress to lift restrictions on U.S. military aid to Colombia. Ashcroft described a link between terrorism and drug trafficking Monday. "The mutually reinforcing relationship between terrorism and drug trafficking should serve as a wake-up call for all Americans," he said. The timing of releasing the indictment Monday was seen by analysts as aimed at backing changes sought by the Bush administration. "The evidence against these guys was collected last April," said Adam Isacson of the Center for International Policy. "Unsealing it now could make it easier to make a sales pitch to Congress to change the law." Under the new proposal, U.S. weapons, helicopters and Colombian troops trained by American special forces officers could be used by the Colombian government against the FARC as part of its ongoing war against guerrilla groups, officials said. President Bush will visit Mexico, Peru and El Salvador in a trip beginning Thursday. Ian Vasquez, an analyst of the international war on drugs for the Cato Institute, a Washington think tank, said, "The timing of the indictment coincides with that visit in which Bush will likely tell Latin American leaders that he wants to link the war on terrorism with the war on drugs." Isacson said, "After Sept. 11 it became much more viable to link the war on drugs with the war on terrorism. It has just taken the administration a few months to turn its gaze to the south." - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel