Pubdate: Sun, 21 Jan 2007
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2007 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Simon Romero
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Colombia
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT IS ENSNARED IN A PARAMILITARY SCANDAL

BOGOTA, Colombia -- The government of President Alvaro Uribe, the
largest recipient of American aid outside the Middle East, has found
itself ensnared in a widening scandal as revelations surface of a
secret alliance between some of the president's most prominent
political supporters and paramilitary death squads.

Testimony this week from Salvatore Mancuso, a former paramilitary
commander who admitted to orchestrating the killing of more than 300
people, as well as a document made public on Friday implicating more
than a dozen politicians in the pact with paramilitaries, have
injected fresh detail into a slow-burning scandal that has caused
Colombia's elite political class to shudder in recent weeks.

Senior members of Mr. Uribe's government and Mr. Uribe himself have
said that anyone shown to have had illegal ties to the paramilitaries,
which terrorized Colombian cities and the countryside in the nation's
internal war, which has gone on for decades, and made fortunes in
cocaine trafficking, should be prosecuted in courts of law.

The scandal has already touched Mr. Uribe's cabinet, with Senator
Alvaro Araujo, the brother of Foreign Minister Maria Consuelo Araujo,
under investigation for collaborating with militias.

"If there's someone involved at the highest level, they will be
fired," Francisco Santos, Colombia's vice president, said in an
interview. "Scrutiny is fine for us," Mr. Santos said. "This country
needs to know the whole truth."

Some of the details coming to light about the breadth of paramilitary
activities are the result of a process set in motion by Mr. Uribe's
own government, which has allowed paramilitary leaders to confess
their crimes and pay reparations in exchange for reduced sentences of
no more than eight years in prison.

Though some militia leaders have balked at the deal, much of Colombia
has been gripped by the first such confession, that of Mr. Mancuso, a
cattleman who helped found the paramilitary movement in the 1980s in
an effort to combat leftist guerrillas.

Mr. Mancuso, 48, who studied English at the University of Pittsburgh,
wept during the first days of his testimony at a special hearing in
Medellin last month. This week, however, he simply read from a
statement describing how he oversaw the assassinations of hundreds of
people, with some operations made possible with information from
military intelligence.

Mr. Mancuso also put Mr. Uribe in the spotlight by saying that
militias pressured people to vote for the president in 2002, when Mr.
Uribe was first elected. Mr. Uribe responded quickly by going on a
national radio network to say he had never sent any emissaries to
strike deals with the paramilitaries.

On the heels of Mr. Mancuso's testimony, a document rumored to exist
in recent weeks was published in the daily newspaper El Tiempo on
Friday. It describes a secret pact in 2001 between Mr. Mancuso, other
paramilitary leaders and 11 congressmen, two governors and five
mayors, in which those present agreed to work together to forge "a new
social contract," largely in order to protect private property rights.

Senator Miguel de la Espriella, one of the signatories to the pact,
helped bring the scandal to light last year by disclosing the ties
between politicians and paramilitaries. Like other officials
implicated in the pact, he said he was forced to sign, raising doubts
as what type of legal punishment, if any, they might receive.

"At first we declined to sign, but when they put a man with a rifle
next to the document we understood we had no choice," Mr. de la
Espriella, a member of the Democratic Colombia party, said in an
e-mail interview.

Asked why he was the only politician to come forward with details of
the secret agreement, Mr. de la Espriella, alluding to widespread
suspicions that legislators and government officials had for years
worked in tandem with the paramilitaries, responded, "I told myself
that a half-truth doesn't serve anybody, and we should all contribute
to the enlightenment of the truth during so many years of war."

Those who signed the document included not only supporters of Mr.
Uribe but also high-ranking officials in the political opposition,
pointing to how a growing portion of the political establishment could
be tarnished by the scandal.

Some 30,000 paramilitary members have been demobilized during Mr.
Uribe's government in recent years. Colombia's military still receives
more than $700 million a year in aid from the United States to combat
drug trafficking and armed insurgencies.

Two guerrilla groups, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and
the National Liberation Army, still operate in the country. A truck
carrying more than 600 pounds of explosives this week destroyed a
dairy plant in southern Colombia owned by Nestle, the Swiss food
company, an act that the police attributed to the rebels.

Although the scandal has emerged as the most pressing political
challenge to Mr. Uribe's presidency, his approval ratings remain high,
at above 60 percent, after five years of rule and a re-election
victory last year. Many Colombians credit Mr. Uribe for declining
levels of murders and kidnappings and robust economic growth.

However, political analysts here say a steady stream of disclosures
related to the paramilitary scandal could diminish Mr. Uribe's
credibility, particularly if implicated officials are perceived to
have close ties to the president. The scandal has already entangled a
former ambassador to Chile and a former head of the intelligence service.

Equally pressing for Mr. Uribe's government could be the scandal's
influence on discussions in the United States Congress of aid to
Colombia and a trade agreement awaiting Congressional approval that
has been signed by Mr. Uribe and President Bush. Political analysts
say the Democratic-led Congress is expected to add greater scrutiny of
human rights issues in Colombia. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake