``Until the collaboration between the Colombian army and paramilitary
groups is broken, the United States will once again find itself supporting
death squads.''
REUTERS
Tuesday, 28 September 1999
Death squad kills six in latest Colombia massacre
BOGOTA -- Ultra-right gunmen massacred at least six peasants
and abducted six others in a raid on a farming community in war-torn northwest
Colombia, officials said on Tuesday.
The killings, which took place on Monday near the village of Guadalupe
in Antioquia province, followed a mass slaying in northeastern Colombia
earlier in the day.
At least seven people were slain before dawn in Santander province by
unidentified gunmen in a working class neighbourhood of Barrancabermeja,
the main oil-refining town.
A municipal human rights official blamed the Guadalupe attack on one
of the burgeoning right-wing death squads or paramilitary gangs that routinely
target suspected Marxist guerrilla sympathisers.
Colombia's long-running civil conflict between guerrillas, paramilitary
gangs and the military has claimed at least 35,000 victims, many of them
civilians, in the past 10 years.
The latest killings came as the government and the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC), Latin America's largest surviving 1960s rebel
army, planned to restart slow-moving peace talks.
A date for the relaunch of negotiations, stalled since mid-July, is
scheduled to be announced this week.
Earlier this month the FARC issued a communique warning that government
backing for illegal death squads, coupled with an surge in U.S. military
aid, could sink the peace process and plunge Colombia into all-out civil
war.
The human rights group, Amnesty International, also has widely criticised
the Colombian military for covert backing for the paramilitary gangs in
their ``dirty war'' against leftists.
The organisation issued a statement on Tuesday urging the United States
not to increase its aid to Colombia, which is currently about $280 million
this year.
``Congress and the Clinton administration must realise that aid to the
Colombian army is aid to the paramilitary groups,'' Amnesty said.
``Until the collaboration between the Colombian army and paramilitary
groups is broken, the United States will once again find itself supporting
death squads.''