Pubdate: Tue, 23 Aug 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Steven Dudley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COLOMBIA DRUG EVIDENCE AGAINST REBELS STACKING UP For Decades, Colombia's Shadowy FARC Rebel Group Was Suspected Of Drug-Trade Activity. Now, Though, Colombian And Foreign Authorities Are Arresting Rebels In Trafficking Cases. BOGOTA - As far as drug busts go, this one was huge: seven tons of cocaine found in a small underground compartment at the rear of a farmhouse in central Venezuela. But as important as the drugs were the armbands also found at the site last year -- from the 16th Front of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. Accusations that the Marxist guerrilla group, which has been fighting the Colombian government for more than four decades, was linked to the drug trade go back to the 1980s. But until recently there was little evidence the rebels were moving cocaine through foreign countries on its way to the United States and Europe, and efforts to prosecute its members for those kinds of crimes proved nearly impossible. That is changing. Increasingly, FARC guerrillas have become a target of Colombian and foreign drug prosecutors. Eight rebels currently face indictments in the United States. Of those, two mid-level FARC commanders, including Ricardo Palmera, alias Simon Trinidad, already were extradited to Washington in recent months to face charges of drug trafficking, among others. The new evidence reflects the relative success of a massive military campaign against FARC strongholds in the southeast of the country -- a region known for its coca farms and cocaine processing -- financed in large part by the $3 billion in U.S. aid to Colombia over the last four years. Security forces have seized 17 tons of refined cocaine and semi-processed coca base, according to government reports, and overrun FARC facilities allegedly used to meet with large-scale drug traffickers. Compounds Captured The government has captured elaborate compounds "complete with air conditioning," U.S. Ambassador William Wood told The Herald. "Where [rebel] leaders met with drug traffickers to finalize deals." Several FARC fronts -- fighting columns deployed in broad regions -- have been tied to trafficking by U.S. and Colombian authorities. Indeed, the rebels have long admitted to collecting protection payments from drug producers and traffickers, just as they extort ranchers, farmers, and businesses to finance their war. The FARC's 14th Front, which operates in the southern province of Caqueta, has long been known as the center of the rebels' drug operations and, more recently, efforts to export cocaine, authorities claim. A mid-level commander of the 14th Front known as Comandante Sonia was the other FARC leader extradited to Washington to await trial on drug charges. She is suspected of keeping watch over a vast network of rivers used to move tons of cocaine headed for foreign markets. Her real name has been variously reported as Omaira Rojas or Nayibe Rojas. And a former 14th Front commander, Jose Benito Cabrera, alias Fabian Ramirez, has been indicted in the United States for allegedly masterminding the network. Cabrera's brother, Erminso Cuevas Cabrera, was recently arrested in Colombia and charged with drug trafficking. The 16TH Front But it was the 16th Front, based largely in the far eastern provinces of Vichada and Guainia along the Venezuelan and Brazilian borders, that was allegedly exporting the seven tons of cocaine seized in Venezuela last year. And it's the 16th Front that has garnered most of the authorities' recent attention. "There are components within the FARC and the 16th Front that are utilizing their position to traffic drugs, and these commanders have control, regionally, to do so," said one U.S. anti-drug official who asked to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the ongoing investigations. The discovery of the seven tons of cocaine in the southwestern Venezuelan state of Bolivar was but one example of the 16th Front's extended reach. In February, authorities surprised a group of kidnappers who were holding Maura Josefina Villareal, the mother of former Florida Marlins pitcher Ugueth Urbina. During the raid, police freed Villareal, captured a suspected member of the 16th Front and seized 600 kilos of cocaine. The suspect, Juan Martinez Vegas, was extradited to Colombia to face charges of kidnapping and rebellion. One official in the government's Administrative Security Directorate, similar to the FBI, said Martinez Vegas was a "very important" member of the Front who trafficked drugs for guns in Venezuela, Brazil and Colombia. In 2001, Colombian authorities captured a Brazilian drug trafficker, Luiz Fernando da Costa, in eastern Vichada province, where he had been in close contact with the 16th Front and its top commander, Tomas Medina, alias Negro Acacio. During the raids that led to the capture, authorities found more than 60 cocaine refining laboratories, 22 airstrips, 16 rebel camps, and papers allegedly showing da Costa-FARC deals involving cocaine traded for weapons. "Negro Acacio is utilizing his position as a commander to traffic drugs," the U.S. counter-drug official said. Medina is one of the FARC members facing U.S. indictments. Cabrera, Medina and Jorge Briceno, alias Mono Jojoy, one of the top FARC military commanders, are the highest-level rebels facing indictments. During the Vichada raids, authorities reportedly intercepted radio communications in which Briceno orders Medina to protect the Brazilian trafficker. Difficult Cases Still, building prosecutions against FARC members for trafficking drugs remains difficult. Witnesses and associates are hard to find. Da Costa, jailed in Brazil, insists the FARC had nothing to do with drug trafficking. One FARC member extradited to the United States for drug trafficking, Nelson Vargas Rueda, also an alleged member of the 16th Front, was found not guilty in a Washington, D.C., court last year and returned to Colombia. And a U.S. federal investigator, speaking anonymously because of the sensitivity of the case, said that the drug case against the FARC's Palmera is very weak. Army and prosecution officials here say they have no doubts that the FARC has turned into a virtual drug cartel. But proving it may be a difficult matter. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth