Pubdate: Thu, 15 Oct 1998 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Copyright: 1998 The Seattle Times Company Author: Frank Bajak, The Associated Press COLOMBIA PULLS TROOPS IN PEACE BID WITH REBELS BOGOTA, Colombia - Government troops are withdrawing from a huge swath of southern Colombia ahead of peace talks with the hemisphere's oldest and largest rebel band. A 16,800-square-mile area will be free of government troops for 90 days beginning Nov. 7, President Andres Pastrana announced last night. The area is a stronghold of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, which has been fighting successive governments for 34 years. Pastrana, who took office Aug. 7, spoke on the eighth day of a nationwide strike by tens of thousands of public-sector employees. The announcement appeared designed to divert attention from the walkout, which has hobbled essential services. Earlier yesterday, thousands of strikers marched on the capital, clogging arteries and jamming Bogota's main square in defiance of Pastrana, who said giving in to union demands would imperil the economy. "The government is more concerned with the peace process and guerrillas than with listening to a part of the public that isn't armed," striking teacher Luz Garcia said. Unions representing more than 650,000 workers are protesting a government austerity package that cuts public-sector spending and reduces wage increases next year to an average of 14 percent. Union leaders insist on salary increases at least in line with Colombia's 18 percent inflation, and an end to plans to privatize state industries. At a news conference last night at the presidential palace, Pastrana said he had issued a decree recognizing the FARC's political status. Government officials said the troop pullout, which began yesterday, would be gradual and verified by a commission including the International Red Cross. "The vast majority of Colombians want peace and are prepared to pay the price for it, but only if it means more democracy, more social justice and more equal opportunity," Pastrana said. A month before he took office, Pastrana met with the FARC's supreme commander, Manuel Marulanda, in the southern jungles and agreed to demilitarize the area as a condition for beginning a peace dialogue. The FARC, at its strongest ever and holding 245 police officers and soldiers captured over the past year, has not yet said what it would ask for in return for laying down its arms. Its 15,000 combatants control vast rural areas of Colombia, funding their armed struggle through kidnapping and "war taxes" on the drug trade. The pullout has raised concerns about guerrilla reprisals against civilians and an upsurge in drug trafficking in the region. The area is a prime cultivation, processing and transit center for coca, the raw material of cocaine. The mayor of the most populous municipality in the southern zone told Radionet radio that residents were concerned about living under rebel rule. "The people have a lot of expectations and a lot of worries," said Omar Garcia, the mayor of San Vicente del Caguan. "The doubts have still not been cleared up." - ---