Pubdate: Thu, 29 Sep 2005 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2005 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Hugh Bronstein Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COLOMBIA SUSPENDS RIGHT-WING WARLORD'S EXTRADITION BOGOTA, Colombia - One of the bloodiest leaders of Colombia's right-wing paramilitaries conditionally won his battle to avoid extradition to the United States on Thursday when the government said he could stay in the country. Diego Fernando Murillo, known as Don Berna, who oversaw a vast criminal network from his Medellin base in the 1990s, will not be sent north to face drug smuggling charges as long as he cooperates with Colombia's demobilization of illegal armed groups. The U.S. Embassy in Bogota said in a statement it was disappointed at the decision to suspend the extradition. It pointed out that Colombia had said extradition would not be negotiated in the demobilization. Under the demobilization, Murillo is required to cooperate with investigators in an effort to provide reparations to those victimized by the paramilitaries over the past 20 years during which they terrorized the Andean country in the name of fighting left-wing rebels. More than 10,000 militia members have turned in their guns. While the United States backs President Alvaro Uribe, elected in 2002 on promises of smashing Colombia's Marxist insurgency, his peace plan threatens to put cases against major drug offenders like Murillo on the back burner. "What happened today is further evidence that top drug lords are calling the shots in this so-called peace process with the government," said Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director for New York-based Human Rights Watch. "This is what the paramilitaries have wanted from the beginning, to avoid extradition. And that's what the criminal who succeeded Pablo Escobar in controlling Medellin got today," he added, referring to Colombia's most notorious cocaine king who was gunned down by authorities in 1993. Critics of the demobilization say it offers soft treatment to those guilty of some of the worst atrocities of Colombia's decades-old guerrilla war. Those who massacred and beheaded peasants suspected of cooperating with the rebels face up to only eight years in prison. Thousands are killed and tens of thousand are forced from their homes every year by Colombia's conflict, what the United Nations calls the world's worst ongoing humanitarian crisis outside Africa. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman