Pubdate: Fri, 08 Sep 2006 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2006 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Gerardo Reyes And Steven Dudley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) TRAFFICKERS-TURNED-'PARAS' FIND WAY TO FOIL EXTRADITION The Colombian Government Is Getting Criticized For Admitting Drug Traffickers Into The Paramilitary Peace Process Some 32,000 illegal paramilitary fighters have surrendered and their top leaders are in custody. But the Colombian government now finds itself on the defensive about the peace talks with the so-called paras, amid complaints that top drug traffickers infiltrated the paramilitaries to avoid extradition to U.S. courts. "It's a farce," said one longtime U.S. government investigator of drug trafficking in Colombia whose agency's regulations do not allow him to be further identified. "Some of these guys were never paramilitaries before." Drug traffickers have been trying to push their way into the peace process since the talks began in 2004, hoping to win protection under an amnesty law that exempts paras from extradition and long jail sentences at home. But now those maneuvers are being highlighted by the cases of four alleged members of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, or AUC: Jhonny Cano, Victor Mejia, Francisco Zuluaga and Juan Carlos Sierra. Cano was the latest to slip into the peace process through the back door. He was a lieutenant for Hernando Gomez -- an alleged drug trafficker from the North Valley Cartel now jailed in Cuba -- before he was captured last October. On Aug. 15, the government OK'd his extradition to the United States but late last month his name suddenly appeared on the list of paramilitary leaders protected from extradition. According to the government, Cano is on the list because he "contracted the AUC to protect him." The government refused to elaborate, saying only that it had passed the case on to prosecutors so they could determine Cano's status. The explanation has not satisfied everyone. "We're very worried that the government says they don't have the information to determine whether this person was a paramilitary," the chief observer of the peace process for the Organization of American States, Sergio Caramana, told The Miami Herald. "This is very troubling." The other three men, also wanted by U.S. authorities on drug charges, were well known in the Colombian underworld before declaring themselves AUC members. The talks have succeeded in demobilizing most of the once-feared AUC units and have led to the surrender of nearly 32,000 fighters -- more than the 15,000 the AUC was believed to have before the talks began. But criticism persists because of the government's erratic decisions. At first, the government excluded Sierra and Mejia from the extradition protection -- even while it accepted Zuluaga and Mejia's twin brother, Miguel Angel. But in August the two turned up as paramilitary leaders who will also enjoy benefits under an amnesty deal. Colombia's government defends its actions by arguing that paramilitary activities and drug smuggling were simply too tightly linked for years to now be separated. "I think this concept of drug trafficker dressed up as para or para dressed up as drug trafficker is not adequate," chief government peace negotiator Luis Carlos Restrepo told the El Tiempo newspaper. "Paramilitarism was articulated through drug trafficking, because drug trafficking gave it the resources it needed for its armed actions." President Alvaro Uribe has extradited 380 suspected drug traffickers to the United States, far more than any of his predecessors. In part because of this record, Washington has continued to support the peace talks with the AUC despite its apparent flaws. Last week, the U.S. government donated another $1.9 million to support the demobilization process -- even while it insists that Colombia must extradite the suspected traffickers participating in it. "When we ask for someone in extradition, we mean it," an embassy spokesperson who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter told The Miami Herald. "We continue to talk to the government about the cases not yet finally approved." Distinguishing between paramilitaries and drug traffickers has never been easy in Colombia, home to both Latin America's longest-running guerrilla war and the largest producers of cocaine and heroin. Legal "self-defense" groups began in the early 1980s as a response by landowners, businessmen and the army to the kidnappings and extortions by left-wing rebels in rural areas. Drug traffickers eventually began co-opting some of the groups, and the government outlawed them. In the late-1990s, the paramilitaries reemerged alongside an increase in guerrilla attacks and began a notoriously brutal campaign of executions of thousands of people they suspected of being leftist rebels or sympathizers. Their best-known leader, Carlos Castano, gave interviews in which he admitted that the groups got up to 70 percent of their financing from drug money to fight against the guerrillas -- who also use drug money to fill their coffers -- but denied the AUC was dominated by drug traffickers. Castano's denials soon fell apart, however, as major alleged traffickers such as Hernan Giraldo, Diego Murillo and Carlos Mario Jimenez challenged his leadership of the AUC. Others, such as Salvatore Mancuso, Rodrigo Tovar and Ramiro Vanoy, began as paramilitaries but allegedly later drifted toward trafficking. Castano's older brother, Vicente, was also known as a suspected trafficker and eventually sided with the traffickers in a dispute with his brother over who controlled the organization. In 2002, the U.S. government indicted Carlos Castano, Mancuso and Sierra for trafficking 17 tons of cocaine to Florida. U.S. prosecutors also indicted Vicente Castano, Murillo, the Mejia twins, Zuluaga, Giraldo, Tovar and Vanoy. In all, eight of the top paramilitary leaders negotiating with the government face U.S. indictments for drug trafficking. "The whole peace process seems like it's a way for these guys to escape years of drug trafficking and murder," said one of the U.S. investigators. Throughout the negotiations with the AUC, the government has argued that Colombia is better off without the paramilitaries in the field and with their leaders in custody. "What should be a scandal here is that the AUC, allied with drug traffickers, has grown into a monster. This is a national disgrace," peace negotiator Restrepo told El Tiempo. Herald special correspondent Jenny Carolina Gonzalez contributed to this report from Colombia. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek