Pubdate: Thu, 07 Jan 1999 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Section: Page, A8 Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Chronicle Author: Frank Bajak, Associated Press San Vicente Del Caguan, Colombia COLOMBIA'S REBEL DESCENDS ELUSIVE LEADER COMES FOR TALKS AFTER 34 YEARS Colombia -- A rebel commander known as "Sureshot" comes down from the Colombian mountains today to talk peace 34 years after pulling together a scraggly.'band of followers that turned into a powerful guerrilla army. Manuel Marnlanda's meeting with President Andres Pastrana in this southern ranching town has raised hopes for an end to a conflict that claims thousands of lives each year as well as prospects for stemming Colombia's booming cocaine trade. For most Colombians, it will be their first real look at the oldest active guerrilla in the Americas, the founder and patriarch of the powerful Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. A farmer's son with a sixth-grade education, Marulanda has come to dominate Colombian political life. The leading newsmagazine, Semana, recently crowned the man wanted for murder, kidnapping, terrorism, rebellion and robbery as its 1998 "Man of the Year." A month before his August inaugural, Pastrana flew to Marulanda's jungle hideout, shaking hands with the guerrilla leader and the proudly showing the photos to the nation. In November, Pastrana pulled government troops from a rebel-dominated southern region the size of Switzerland. The rebels, who officials say have protected the drug trade, have made no concessions. The group has indicated, however, that it might help curb drug trafficking as part of a peace settlement. So far, Marulanda's conditions for `peace include dismantling the right-wing paramilitary groups that arose in response to guerrilla kidnapping and extortion, and prisoner exchanges. In the long term, he seeks rural wealth redistribution in a country that has never seen agrarian reform and where the wealthiest 5 percent of the population earns 30 times more than the bottom 5 percent intermediary between the government and the FARC. Skeptics worry that the FARC is buying time before an all-out drive to take power. Whatever the truth, the answers lie with its mysterious leader. Born Pedro Antonio Main, Marulanda took up arms in 1949 after Conservative Party henchmen began slaughtering supporters of the peasant-backed Liberal Party. Over a decade, 200,000 people died. Marulanda co-founded the FARC in 1964, after government troops overran the agrarian enclave he and other communist refugees called home. Decades later, he has transformed the hit-and-run band into a l5,000-member guerrilla army that controls roughly 40 percent of the Colombian countryside. All the while, Marulanda has maintained a firm grip on the organization, belying army efforts to portray him as out of touch. `What we re seeing is that all that was false, that effectively it is Mamlanda who leads and that it is Marulanda who gives the movement respect," said former government peace commissioner Daniel Garcia-Pena. Manilanda has never left Colombia, said biographer Arturo A]ape. In recent months, he has been holding court in jungle hideouts, receiving lawmakers and government officials. Marulanda, they said, is shy but an excellent listener "He's a very concrete, the way peasants speak," said Senator Juan Manuel Ospina, who has met twice with Marulanda. "If you get preachy with him, he looks the other way." During one meeting, Marulanda was dressed like the coffee farmer he might have become -- white shirt, khaki pants, towel over the shoulder for wiping sweat off the. brow, machete and holstered pistol on his belt. At head, Alape said, Mani]anda is a warrior. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady