Pubdate: Fri, 12 Nov 1999
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company
Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
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Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Author: Steven Dudley, Special to The Washington Post

CAR BOMB IN BOGOTA KILLS 6, INJURES 40

Blast Raises Fears Of A Terror Campaign

BOGOTA, Colombia, Nov. 11 - A car bomb ripped through a posh neighborhood
in northern Bogota today, killing six people and injuring 40 others. The
blast stirred fears that drug traffickers are beginning a new terror
campaign to subvert the government's efforts to extradite them to the
United States.

Police said 175 pounds of explosives were placed in a red Mazda pickup and
set off by remote control. The blast leveled a house and a liquor store
where the car was parked. It blew out the windows of apartment buildings up
to three blocks away.

"I thought I was in an earthquake," said Blanca Nellie, an employee at an
apartment building around the corner from the bomb site, as she swept up
glass from the sidewalk.

The bomb came just two days after a 14-pound bomb exploded under an
electricity pole, injuring nine people, including three investigators for
the attorney general's office. But police refused to speculate on who was
responsible for the bombs or if they are related to the possible
extradition of up to 40 suspected drug traffickers.

The Colombian Supreme Court gave the go-ahead this week to extradite an
alleged Colombian trafficker, Jaime Orlando Lara, alias the King of Heroin,
and an alleged Venezuelan trafficker, Fernando Jose Flores. Responding
defiantly to the bombing today, President Andres Pastrana announced hours
after the blast that he had signed extradition orders for Orlando Lara,
Flores and a third alleged trafficker, a Cuban identified as Sergio Braulio
Gonzalez, on whose case the court ruled Oct. 26.

"At this point, it is too early to say these bombs are related to
extradition," said Alberto Ruiz, a commander of the National Police, while
rescuers took away the last of the bodies. "[But] the way this was done
does have some similarities to that time."

He was referring to the specter of extradition to the United States that
led the Medellin drug cartel to conduct a terror campaign in the late 1980s
and early 1990s. That campaign claimed the lives of hundreds of policemen,
several judges and a leading presidential candidate. The terror campaign
was one of the key elements that pushed lawmakers to write into the 1991
constitution a clause forbidding extradition.

The courts overturned that law in 1997 but no one has been extradited since
1990.

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