Pubdate: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/colombia.htm (Colombia) DON'T LET COLOMBIA'S PARAMILITARIES SKATE Human-Rights Abusers Should Pay For Their Crimes Colombia shouldn't let AUC paramilitaries or anyone else involved in large-scale human-rights violations, terrorist acts or narco- trafficking buy their way out of punishment for such vicious crimes. We staunchly support Colombian President Alvaro Uribe's strong military campaign against illegal armies and continued U.S. military aid for his efforts to secure the nation. He shouldn't go soft now, when that campaign is showing results and guerrillas and the AUC are being pressed as never before. Nor should the United States permit a policy that would offer de facto immunity for the leaders of groups on the State Department's terrorist list. It's one thing to offer amnesty to players -- mostly the foot soldiers of illegal armies, many of them recruited as children -- as an incentive to defect when there is no evidence that they participated in atrocities. That's common worldwide and already available to insurgents in Colombia today. Offering de facto immunity to the worst offenders is quite another story. That may seem like a short cut to peace in Colombia, which has been riven by uncivil violence for four decades. But in the long run the country has to strengthen its rule of law and democratic institutions, not weaken them by giving notorious killers an easy out-of-jail card. Colombian society will also have to face the truth of its ugly past if it hopes to one day reconcile its war wounds. As Latin American countries such as Peru, Chile and Argentina are realizing now, sweeping atrocities under the rug doesn't make them go away. Decades later, countries remain torn as victims continue to call for justice. Under Mr. Uribe's proposed legislation, however, notorious human-rights abusers could avoid prison by serving parole or house arrest, doing community service, paying reparations to victims' families or advocacy groups or turning over their land. First in line to benefit would be the 13,000 AUC paramilitaries who have been negotiating their gradual demobilization by 2005 -- even though notoriously brutal AUC forces have been implicated in many massacres in remote villages and the killing of two presidential candidates, among other atrocities. Mr. Uribe didn't help matters, either, when he recently accused human- rights groups of being allied with terrorists. The real terrorists are the AUC and FARC and ELN leftist guerrilla groups, all on the U.S. terrorist-group list. This troika of practiced human-rights abusers finances their violence by narco trafficking. Indicted by the United States last year, Carlos Casta=F1o and two other AUC leaders stand accused of running an enterprise that smuggled 17 tons of cocaine in five years, and U.S. extradition efforts shouldn't wane. Other drug dealers reportedly have bought memberships in the AUC, hoping to keep their illicit profits and avoid prison via the legislation. The United States has been a good ally to Colombia, but the U.S. position also has been clear: Indicted drug traffickers and gross human-rights violators shouldn't be let off the hook. Let's hope President Uribe heeds the message. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin