Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jan 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: John Otis COLOMBIAN DEATH SQUADS ENDANGERING PEACE TALKS, ANALYSTS SAY BOGOTA, Colombia, Jan. 12, 1999 - After a three-day rampage by paramilitary death squads that killed at least 139 people, Colombians are demanding that their government either negotiate with the outlawed militias or fight back. The massacres began just a day after peace talks opened last week between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, Colombia's largest Marxist guerrilla group. Analysts warned that the talks could unravel if President Andres Pastrana's administration fails to deal with the far-right paramilitaries - who target guerrillas and their civilian supporters. "These are organized groups that have demonstrated a capacity, an evil ability, to create havoc. We would be naive and stupid if we didn't take them into account in the peace process,'' said Juan Manuel Santos, a member of a government-appointed peace commission. "Pastrana is in a very delicate situation,'' added Robin Kirk, who monitors Colombia for Human Rights Watch, an independent organization, in Washington. "I think the talks will survive this, but they may not survive the fourth or the fifth (paramilitary) offensive.'' Last week, heavily armed gunmen began sweeping through towns and villages in six of Colombia's 32 states. The paramilitaries robbed and burned houses and rounded up men, women and children. The attackers shot, beheaded or slit the throats of the civilians, according to witnesses. "They came in shooting and knocking down doors and grabbed people indiscriminately,'' said one distraught survivor in the village of El Tigre in southern Putumayo state where 26 people were slain. "Children and students who had nothing to do with the war were killed.'' The death toll is likely to climb because scores of people remain missing. Teodoro Diaz, mayor of the northern city of Apartado, announced that the paramilitaries had circulated a "hit list'' with 100 names. The U.N. High Commission for Human Rights accused the paramilitaries of "systematic attacks against the civilian population'' and expressed "dismay" over the failure of the Colombian army and police to protect people from the carnage. On Tuesday, President Pastrana promised a crackdown. "We are going to reinforce (the army),'' Pastrana said. "They are going to embark on operations to control this escalation by the paramilitaries.'' Through massacres and selective assassinations, the paramilitaries, who have 5,000 fighters in 29 fronts, have managed to roll back some of the recent military gains by the FARC and the National Liberation Army, or ELN, a smaller rebel group. By contrast, the 120,000-man Colombian army appears to be losing ground. During the past three years, some 20,000 FARC and ELN fighters have battered the army and the police in a series of attacks, capturing more than 300 troops in the process. Government forces also have been ambushed by the paramilitaries. "They keep 15 or 20 police in a municipality, and then 100, 150, or 200 rebels or paramilitaries arrive and it's impossible to control the situation,'' said Alberto Builes Ortega, the governor of Antioquia state, which was the hardest hit in the offensive. "There needs to be a much better use of military intelligence, better training and more troops.'' The paramilitaries sprang up in the 1980s in response to guerrilla attacks. They are financed by cattle ranchers and other large landowners - many of whom were victims of rebel kidnappings and extortion. Some of the groups, however, provide protection for drug traffickers. According to Human Rights Watch, the paramilitaries are responsible for the majority of human rights abuses committed in Colombia and have carried out hundreds of massacres. Authorities claim that their raids have displaced more than 300,000 peasants. Yet they enjoy the backing of many upper-class Colombians, who credit them with preventing a rebel triumph. Although they have a separate command structure and source of weapons, the paramilitaries operate "frequently and in direct coordination with Colombian security forces,'' according to a report released last year by Human Rights Watch. Experts say that there is little enthusiasm by either the army or the police to go after the paramilitaries because they are often viewed as allies rather than enemies. "The paramilitaries have an important base of support from ranchers, farmers and businessmen,'' said Alfredo Molano, a sociologist and author. "It's not easy to break these ties, or the ties between the army and the paramilitaries. Why? Because they are useful. ... They are the ones who can undertake illegal operations." The government has arrested more than 100 paramilitaries in the past year, and has offered a $1 million bounty for the capture of Carlos Castano, the commander of the paramilitary umbrella organization known as the United Self-Defense Groups of Colombia. However, Kirk, of Human Rights Watch, said the list of detained paramilitaries includes only a few high-ranking members and that the government has ignored the groups' financial backers. "We haven't seen any evidence that there is a plan on the ground or working'' to round up important paramilitary leaders, Kirk said. "At some point, the government has to decide: either they attack the paramilitaries with the possibility that it divides the army, or they accept that the paramilitaries continue and break off the talks with the FARC,'' Molano said. Castano was rumored to have been killed in a rebel raid on his headquarters in northern Colombia last month. But he escaped, and the paramilitary offensive may have been a response to the guerrilla attack. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry