Pubdate: Wed, 26 Nov 2003 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2003 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Juan Forero, The New York Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) PARAMILITARY FACTION DISARMS MEDELLIN -- After a minute of silence in memory of the thousands killed in Colombia's conflict, 800 fighters from an urban band of a right-wing paramilitary group laid down their weapons on Tuesday in a ceremony the government says could bring the country closer to ending its 39-year-old war. The ceremony was choreographed by President Alvaro Uribe's government and it clearly did not mean the end of the United Self-Defense Forces. But it did suggest the authorities may be making headway in their new two-pronged strategy to end the war: Co-opt the right, defeat the left. Uribe hopes the laying down of arms will represent the first step in the demobilization of a 13,000-member federation of paramilitary factions -- known as the United Self-Defense Forces -- which is planned as a two-year process. If successful, it would be the first time in Latin America that a far- right, anti-guerrilla force has demobilized through a formal process before the end of a conflict. The government's hope is that this will put pressure on two rebel groups that are the paramilitaries' longtime adversaries -- the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and National Liberation Army -- to negotiate peace accords. "Today, after a long stretch, we have a first important accomplishment," Luis Carlos Restrepo, Uribe's top negotiator with insurgent groups, told rows of young fighters in Medellin's convention hall. "Welcome to civilian life." The ceremony, involving a Medellin faction called Cacique Nutibara, was carefully prepared. Inside the convention center, the young men -- their heads shaved, holding rifles at their side and wearing newly pressed camouflage fatigues -- sang the national anthem. Then they formed long rows and laid down their AK-47s, sawed off shotguns, old carbines and revolvers -- fewer than 200 weapons in all. Reporters were boxed off to the sides, barred from interviewing the fighters. A videotaped greeting from three top paramilitary commanders played on a giant television screen. The three -- Carlos Castano and Salvatore Mancuso, both of whom have been indicted in the United States on drug trafficking charges, and Diego Fernando Murillo, a reputed cocaine lord who heads Cacique Nutibara -- hailed the moment as the start of a new bid for peace. After the ceremony, the young men were bused to the town of La Ceja, outside Medellin. They are to stay at a recreation center for three weeks, and then enter job training or educational programs. Critics including human rights groups and some U.S. congressmen condemned the disarmament as a half-baked process that would let mass murderers and cocaine traffickers go free. They said the demobilization would not weaken the paramilitary group, with top commanders remaining free to recruit and to oversee operations. "There's no transparency and no accountability," said Jose Miguel Vivanco, who is Americas director for Human Rights Watch. "How can we trust this process? Not a single international agency is participating." Uribe is pushing legislation that would allow the government to strike deals with the leaders of the Self-Defense Forces, with the paramilitaries disarming in exchange for incentives that include suspended jail time for top commanders. Those who demobilized on Tuesday did so under legislation allowing insurgent groups to demobilize and members to be reincorporated into society. With support of the military, landowners and cocaine trafficking, the United Self-Defense Forces has grown, its member groups controlling of wide swaths of territory and wiping out villages and killing union organizers and leftist politicians. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager