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Keyword: caqueta

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  • Colombia Arrests 5 with Explosives

    09/15/2010 2:03:10 AM PDT · by Cindy · 2 replies
    LATIN AMERICA HERALD TRIBUNE ^ | September 15, 2010 | n/a
    SNIPPET: "BOGOTA – Police seized 100 kilos of pentolite and arrested five people, including four Ecuadorians, who were transporting the high explosive on a highway in southwestern Colombia, a police commander said Tuesday. A 17-year-old girl carrying a baby was among the foreigners arrested, the National Police commander in the southern border province of Putumayo, Col. Orlando Polo, said. Officers also seized 6,000 meters (6,565 yards) of detonating cord, Polo told reporters in Mocoa, the capital of Putumayo. The explosives and detonating cord were in a truck apparently headed for Florencia, the capital of neighboring Caqueta province." SNIPPET: "The pentolite...
  • Private U.S. Operatives on Risky Missions in Colombia

    02/14/2004 11:25:00 AM PST · by Tailgunner Joe · 14 replies · 604+ views
    NYT ^ | February 12, 2004 | JUAN FORERO
    After their tiny plane crashed deep in the jungles of southern Colombia, three American civilians on a mission to search for cocaine labs, drug planes and, occasionally, guerrilla units were taken hostage by Marxist rebels. A year later, the men's families say the captives have been all but forgotten. Some say that is the way American officials and the men's employers want it to be. The three Americans — Marc Gonsalves, Keith Stansell and Thomas Howes — worked cloaked in secrecy for two subsidiaries of Northrop Grumman, the huge military contractor, in an arrangement used increasingly by the United States...
  • Americans Endure Captivity in Colombia

    09/19/2003 1:13:12 PM PDT · by Tailgunner Joe · 15 replies · 379+ views
    AP ^ | Sep. 12, 2003 | ANDREW SELSKY
    Guarded by hundreds of armed rebels deep in a malaria-infested jungle, three American captives pass the time playing with a homemade deck of cards and dreaming of their families. The threat of death always hangs nearby. The three U.S. military contractors have been cut off from the outside world since their capture by rebels seven months ago. That isolation was broken when a Colombian journalist traveled for days over rough roads and jungle rivers with a rebel escort to interview them July 25 in remote southern Colombia. "They were nervous, and there were traces of fear on their faces," freelance...