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FARC Marxist Rebel Leader Captured
The Washington Times ^ | January 4, 2004 | GONZALO SOLANO, AP

Posted on 01/04/2004 3:04:48 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- A senior leader of neighboring Colombia's main rebel group was arrested in Ecuador, the nation's police chief said Saturday, announcing the capture of the highest-ranking official of the leftist guerrilla army during nearly four decades of war.

A Colombian official said the United States played a role in the capture.

Ecuadorean Police Chief Jorge Poveda confirmed that Simon Trinidad was detained late Friday. He did not give any details about what Trinidad was doing in Ecuador or how long he had been there.

Trinidad is a member of the general staff of the 16,000-member Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the largest rebel group in Colombia. He was one of the top negotiators during peace talks with the government that began in January 1999. The talks collapsed in February 2002, and the army resumed operations against the FARC.

"Long live the FARC!" Trinidad shouted while being escorted under heavy police guard to an army helicopter that left for Tulcan, a city on the Colombian border.


Simon Trinidad, one of the seven members of the ruling secretariat of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, shouts as he is escorted by specials forces, at the military base in Bogota,Colombia, Saturday, Jan.3, 2004. Ecuadorean authorities on Saturday captured the most senior Colombian rebel commander in four decades of guerrilla warfare, in the biggest victory of hardline President Alvaro Uribe's campaign to crush the leftist insurgency.(AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

Ecuador and Colombian authorities gave differing accounts of how Trinidad was captured.

Poveda said Trinidad was detained during a routine document check in Quito.

But Colombian authorities said Ecuadorean police captured him at a medical clinic after Colombian agents notified them that Trinidad was there seeking treatment.

A Colombian military source said Colombian intelligence had information that Trinidad was suffering from prostate cancer and went to Quito for treatment. Eight agents tracked him down to a medical clinic and notified Ecuadorean authorities, the source said on condition of anonymity.

It was not known where the clinic was located.

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe praised the capture as evidence the country's four-decade leftist insurgency can be defeated.

"Countrymen: The capture of a FARC leader shows that terrorism will never triumph," Uribe told reporters.

He also urged the group's fighters to desert en masse.

"It would be good if all of you left the guerrillas, which only serve to kidnap, murder and sustain a drug empire that only enriches its leaders," he said.

Colombia Defense Minister Jorge Alberto Uribe said the United States played a part in Trinidad's capture, but declined to give details.

A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Bogota, Colombia, declined to comment. The United States has been training Colombian forces and supplying intelligence equipment.

"It's the biggest blow the government has dealt the FARC since the organization was born 40 years ago," said Alfredo Rangel, director of the Security and Democracy Foundation, a Bogota think tank.

The FARC likely will be looking to strike back, he said.

Colombia had issued an international arrest warrant to Interpol, the international police agency, and offered a reward for Trinidad's arrest.

The capture comes after the commander of the Colombian army, Gen. Martin Orlando Carreno, made it his New Year's resolution to capture or kill at least one of the seven secretariat members within a year, or resign.

Ecuadorean President Lucio Gutierrez said he informed a jubilant President Uribe about the capture and Trinidad's imminent extradition to Colombia.

"I think this really helps maintain excellent relations between our two countries and improves regional security," Gutierrez told Colombia's RCN radio.

The 54-year-old rebel, whose real name is Ricardo Ovidio Palmera Pineda, is wanted on some 30 counts of massacres, bombings and kidnappings.

The Colombian government had multimillion-dollar bounties on members of the FARC secretariat, but it was unclear how much money was offered for Trinidad.

His capture is a boost to President Uribe, who faces growing pressure to show concrete successes to justify the tax hikes and spending cuts he has used to pay for the war.

Trinidad is an oddity amid the mostly peasant ranks of the FARC. He is the son of a wealthy cattle rancher who studied economics and went on to be a banker before becoming a rebel.

He once said the growing gap between the rich and poor in Colombia drove him to take up arms in the late 1980s, before becoming one of the FARC's most visible faces.

Earlier this month, the FARC reported that another member of the secretariat, Efrain Guzman, died of natural causes at 68. Guzman, who was replaced by Ivan Rios, was one of the FARC's founding fathers but was the least well-known of the top commanders.

The FARC and a smaller rebel group, the National Liberation Army, have been battling to topple the government and establish a Marxist state in Colombia for 39 years.

Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: captured; colombia; communism; equador; farc; latinamerica; marxists; terrorism

1 posted on 01/04/2004 3:04:49 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
This is a good sign. Colombia has suffered greatly with a 40 year civil war.
2 posted on 01/04/2004 3:28:18 AM PST by tom paine 2
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To: All
If you can make a donation to Free Republic, then don't make others carry your water!

3 posted on 01/04/2004 3:29:55 AM PST by Support Free Republic (Happy New Year)
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To: tom paine 2
His capture is a boost to President Uribe, who faces growing pressure to show concrete successes to justify the tax hikes and spending cuts he has used to pay for the war.

Bump!

4 posted on 01/04/2004 3:39:50 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Very good news.

FARC, contrary to that claimed in the article, is not composed primarily of peasants. It would be more correct to say, perhaps, that the foot soldiers are usually peasants (often, in fact, children kidnapped from peasant families and trained to fight), but the leaders and planners are generally college educated and many are from well-off families. The initial group did its preparation in Cuba some 40 years ago, and was composed of the usual crowd of middle-class Marxist college students.

It would be interesting to know if the leadership contains younger people, or if it is still basically the group that is now in its 50s-70s. (In which case, maybe the intelligence services should regularly monitor doctors who specialize in prostate cancer!)
5 posted on 01/04/2004 8:00:36 AM PST by livius
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To: livius
FARC, contrary to that claimed in the article, is not composed primarily of peasants.

Of course not. Communist rebel groups never are. Castro and his thugs, the Chiapan leadership in Mexico, the FARC, the Allende family and their friends in Chile, etc, etc...

6 posted on 01/04/2004 9:02:23 AM PST by Texas_Dawg (Go, Dean, Go.)
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