Sunday, 21 July 2013
Colombian president vows to fight Farc after killings
Colombia's president has ordered the army "not to stop
shooting" until the conflict with the Farc rebels is
over, after 15 soldiers died in an ambush.
Juan Manuel Santos also ordered more troops to the eastern
Arauca region, where the attack by suspected Farc gunmen
took place on Saturday.
Bogota and the Farc are currently holding talks in Cuba to
end more than five decades of conflict.
The government has rejected a rebel call for a truce during the
talks.
It says a ceasefire would only provide the opportunity for the
left-wing rebels to regroup and rearm.
Pipeline ambush
"I instructed our forces not to stop shooting until the conflict
is over," said Mr Santos, who is now in the Arauca region for
a security summit in the town of Tame.
"These attacks are not the way. They will be confronted
forcefully.
"All of Colombia must work for peace precisely
so that incidents like those that occurred in
the last 24 hours never happen again," he said adding that the peace
talks in Cuba should continue as normal.
The incident happened in a rural part of Arauca known as El
Mordisco, when more than 70 Farc rebels attacked a group of
26 soldiers guarding an oil pipeline.
The Colombian authorities said 15 government soldiers died in
the attack, although earlier report had put number of the
killed at 17.
Six rebels were reported to have died and another 12 seized by
the army.
In a separate incident in south-west Colombia, clashes killed
four soldiers and several Farc fighters.
Committed to peace?
The peace talks, which started in November, represent the
fourth attempt at a negotiated peace deal since the beginning
of the conflict in the early 1960s.
The last attempt to achieve peace collapsed in 2002, when it
became clear that the rebels had become stronger during
more three years of negotiations under a ceasefire.
Meanwhile, the Farc said it had captured a former US soldier
and was willing to release him to prove its commitment to
the peace process.
In a statement, the rebels named the man as Kevin Scott
Sutay and said he had been taken on 20 June in El Retorno
in the southern Guaviare Department.
The US has denied he was on any form of military operation,
saying he was in the area as a tourist and had "nothing to do
with Colombia's internal conflict".
The Farc are thought to have some 8,000 fighters, down from
about 16,000 in 2001.
The government estimates that 600,000 people have been
killed since the conflict began with some three million more
internally displaced by the fighting.
Last week, the Farc's chief peace negotiator said the conflict
was nearing its end.
Ivan Marquez, who is taking part in the Cuba talks, called
on left-wing parties and unions to join the effort to achieve
peace.
The government wants to sign a peace accord by November.
But Mr Marquez warned against rushing into a settlement.
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