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Hit on Castaño Fails-But He 'Goes To Ground'

Where would this verminous animal go to hide-I mean outside of Colombia?Some deep dark jungle hole where he'll rot slow and sure I hope!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3641265.stm

Colombian warlord goes to ground

The leader of Colombia's right-wing AUC paramilitaries has gone into hiding after an attempt on his life.
Unidentified attackers opened fire on Carlos Castano on Friday, killing several bodyguards, but the leader escaped and has not been seen since.

The attack came as the AUC was in talks with the government to demobilise its 13,000 heavily armed fighters.

Castano has been convicted of innumerable massacres and murders and is one of Colombia's most feared men.

Indications are that the attempt was carried out by other right-wing paramilitaries linked to the drugs trade, the BBC's Jeremy McDermott reports.

It seems that elements within the AUC (United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia) feared Castano was about to cut a deal with the US, where he is wanted on charges of smuggling 17 tonnes of cocaine.

His wife, Kenia Gomez, has asked the authorities for protection after the attack on Castano's ranch.

Drug traffickers

Castano founded the AUC in 1997 although he had been fighting a war to the death with the country's left-wing rebels ever since they kidnapped and killed his father over 20 years ago.

Since then, the paramilitaries have become little more than armed drug traffickers.

Castano called a unilateral ceasefire in December 2002 and started a peace process with the government.

However, he has long lost control of the movement he founded and it seems several paramilitary factions want him dead, fearful of what he will tell the authorities should he cut a deal.

Castano now appears to be on the run not just from his guerrilla enemies and the state, but his former comrades as well, our correspondent notes.

By Sam Salmon on Apr 19, 2004, 23:44 in Politics & the war. AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Sam Salmon says on Apr 25, 2004, 21:30:

Further to this story http:// Further to this story http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/world/americas/8513922.htm may or may not work .

Posted on Sun, Apr. 25, 2004




COLOMBIA


Militia fighting drug extradition

Whatever lies behind the disappearance of leader Carlos Castaño, it's clear the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia is now a drug-trafficking outfit.

BY SIBYLLA BRODZINSKY

Special to The Herald


BOGOTA - Even before an apparent assassination attempt against the figurehead and founder of Colombia's paramilitary groups, militia factions closely linked to drug trafficking had slowly begun to take over the organization in a bid to avoid extradition to the United States, analysts say.

Carlos Castaño, credited with uniting myriad antiguerrilla militia groups under the umbrella of the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia, or AUC, has not been seen or heard from since an apparent attempt on his life April 16. Analysts and officials believe the gunmen acted on orders of rival groups of the same organization, but details of the incident remain unclear.

Already, Castaño had been isolated within the organization that he founded, apparently alone in his willingness to negotiate a demobilization of AUC forces, even face possible extradition to the United States.

When the AUC named its team to negotiate its demobilization with the government of President Alvaro Uribe on March 31, Castaño was pointedly excluded from the list.

DEEP DIVISION

''The assassination attempt shows just how deep the division between the doves and hawks was,'' said Sen. Samuel Moreno, a member of the congressional peace commission. ``The hawks are the ones allied with drug trafficking, and they're in control now.''

The history between paramilitaries and drug traffickers is long. Many of the first self-defense groups were funded by traffickers to keep rebels, who charged them ''taxes,'' at bay. Later, the paramilitary groups were funded by cattle ranchers and other wealthy landowners for the same purpose. In recent years, many AUC units became directly involved in the business, processing and shipping drugs to the United States and Europe, according to Colombian and U.S. officials.

But under Castaño, analysts said, the trafficking was secondary to the counterguerrilla ideology that moved the AUC to fight leftist rebels through brutal massacres, assassinations and disappearances of suspected collaborators and occasional battlefield clashes.

''Without Castaño, who gave the AUC its political ideology, what's left are the leaders whose primary interest is avoiding extradition on drug charges,'' said Mauricio Romero, an expert on Colombian paramilitary groups at Bogotá's National University.

Castaño and AUC leader Salvatore Mancuso were indicted in the United States on drug charges in 2002. Dozens of other AUC members have been named collaborators of drug kingpins by the U.S. Treasury Department.

Castaño had said he would be willing to turn himself in to U.S. authorities to defend himself against the charges and had agreed with government negotiators to deal with the problem of extradition separately from demobilization talks. He had been the driving force behind the negotiations after he declared the AUC ''no longer necessary'' because of President Uribe's tough security policies against guerrillas.

DIFFERENT VIEW

'The `narcos' have a different view. They will demobilize their mercenary armies only in exchange for a promise they will not be extradited,'' said Rodrigo Franco, a paramilitary leader whose troops were decimated last year in an internal battle with a rival AUC faction.

'The `narcos' are preparing for a battle against extradition [to the United States], and they need to have a monolithic and absolute unity within the organization,'' Franco said in an e-mail reply to a Herald query. ''Carlos [Castaño] and I were in the way. That's why they tried to eliminate us,'' said Franco, who is in hiding but believes Castaño is dead.

AUC leader Mancuso in his first statement after the Castaño incident made it clear that extradition was now the main issue in negotiations with the government.

''With respect to drug trafficking, how do we collaborate with all the information we might have . . . and in exchange for what political and legal benefits?'' he asked in an interview published by the El Colombiano newspaper. ``Who is going to give us the guarantee that the sword of Damocles of extradition will be removed?






' a la orden!'

' a la orden!'

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