Pubdate: Wed, 01 Oct 2003 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Frank Davies, Frances Robles POWELL PRAISES URIBE'S STANCE ON HUMAN RIGHTS The U.S Secretary Of State Says The Colombian President Is Dedicated To Respecting Freedoms WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Colin Powell said Tuesday that visiting Colombian President Alvaro Uribe reassured him about Colombia's efforts to protect human rights while prosecuting a war against guerrillas and drug-traffickers. After a 30-minute meeting at the State Department, Powell said Uribe's speech to the United Nations earlier in the day had been ``a clear commitment to human rights.'' Emerging from the session, Uribe told reporters: 'We want one day in which we can look in the eyes of the citizens of the world and say, `We have overcome terrorists transparently, with the observance of human rights.' '' Important Time Uribe's whirlwind trip to New York and Washington comes at a critical juncture for the Colombian president, elected last year on a promise to get tough with his country's guerrilla groups and drug traffickers. His recent attack on human-rights groups -- accusing them of being virtual spokesmen for leftist guerrillas -- combined with his proposal to offer generous deals to gunmen accused of massacres found him under attack internationally. This week's Cambio news magazine in Bogota showed a lone Uribe walking with the headline, ``Alone against the world?'' Uribe has proposed allowing members of right- and left-wing illegal armies accused of atrocities to skip prison by paying fines if they agree to lay down their weapons and help end the nation's nearly 40- year-old insurgency. Politicians' Letter In Washington, 56 House members sent a letter to Uribe last week saying the plan would ``amount to impunity for serious human rights violations and erode the rule of law.'' Two Florida members -- Democrat Robert Wexler of Boca Raton and Republican Katherine Harris of Sarasota -- signed the letter. In his conciliatory speech to the U.N. and in meetings in Washington, Uribe sought to soften his remarks about the human-rights groups and clarify his points on amnesty. ''I understand the worry that arises from diminishing justice for serious crimes, but also understand that in the context of 30,000 terrorists, peace is definitely better justice for a nation where several generations have not experienced a single day without terror,'' Uribe told the General Assembly. On Capitol Hill, Uribe met with Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., and several members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, including chairman Richard Lugar, R-Ind. Powell also praised Uribe for acceding to a major U.S. request that effectively grants U.S. citizens in Colombia immunity from the new International Criminal Court. U.S. officials had briefly held up military aid to Colombia, as well as 34 other countries that did not sign such agreements. The Bush administration has opposed the international court as an infringement on U.S. authority. Davies reported from Washington, and Robles reported from Bogota - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens