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April 3, 2000
The Massacre at Mapiripán
by Jo-Marie Burt
In July 1997, the paramilitary group known as the United Self-Defense
Units of Colombia (AUC) went on a grisly killing spree in Mapiripán,
a small coca-growing town in southeastern Colombia. According to
eyewitness accounts, the paramilitaries hacked their victims to
death with machetes, decapitated many with chainsaws and dumped
the bodies--some still alive--into the Guaviare River. At least
30 people were killed, though the true number of dead may never
be known. Carlos Castaño, the self-anointed leader of the
AUC, immediately and unabashedly took credit for the massacre.
But Castaño did not act alone. Human rights observers immediately
noted the complicity of the Colombian armed forces in the Mapiripán
massacre. The paramilitaries used an army-guarded airstrip to land
from their stronghold in northern Colombia and from which to launch
their attack. Nor did the authorities respond to repeated calls
by a local judge to stop the attack, which lasted six consecutive
days.
Evidence later emerged suggesting that the role of the Colombian
military in the massacre was in fact much deeper, and in March 1999
Colombian prosecutors indicted Colonel Lino Sánchez, operations
chief of the Colombian Army's 12th Brigade, for planning, with Castaño,
the Mapiripán massacre. This is not surprising, given that
the links between paramilitaries and the Colombian army have been
well established. According to a February Human Rights Watch report,
half of the Colombian Army's 18 brigades have clear links to paramilitary
groups.
In recent weeks, new evidence obtained by Ignacio Gómez of
the Bogotá daily El Espectador, suggests that weeks,
if not days, before the Mapiripán massacre, Colonel Sánchez
received "special training" by U.S. Army Green Berets
on Barrancón Island, on the Guaviare River. While it cannot
be said that U.S. forces were directly involved in the massacre,
or even knew that it was being planned, the events offer compelling
evidence that U.S. equipment, training and money can be easily turned
to vile purposes in what Human Rights Watch has called a "war
without quarter."
The reports linking U.S. military forces to an army unit involved
in gross human rights abuses should give pause to legislators contemplating
a massive infusion of taxpayer money to the Colombian military.
This may be difficult for Washington legislators, addicted as they
are to campaign money from corporations like Sikorsky Aircraft,
a subsidiary of United Technology, and Bell Helicopter Textron,
makers of Blackhawk helicopters, who stand to gain millions of dollars
from the aid package, and amenable as they are to the interests
of big corporations like Occidental Petroleum with megabucks at
stake in Colombia. Though observers note that human rights violations
by the Colombian military have decreased, they ignore that this
is because the military has farmed out much of its dirty work to
the paramilitaries, and aided and abetted paramilitaries in their
push to establish territorial control.
The $1.7 billion aid package proposed by the Clinton administration
threatens to dramatically escalate Colombia's war and undermine
the possibilities for a lasting peace. If the current aid package
is approved, it will mean that Washington will provide direct aid
to the Army. It will also mean financing a long-term counterinsurgency
effort to control southern Colombia, the heart of activity of the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
Administration officials argue that U.S. aid will not be used to
pay for army units involved in human rights abuses--a policy that
is now law thanks to the Leahy Amendment passed in 1996. In order
to not violate this law and still send money and training to Colombia's
military, Washington is helping the Colombian army create new brigades
of "clean" officers that will operate in "counternarcotics"
operations in southern Colombia. These "clean" operations
will get much of the planned U.S. assistance, while the paramilitaries
continue their "dirty war" and their drug trafficking
operations, unimpeded, in the north.
As the ties between U.S. training and abusive officers in the Mapiripán
massacre underscore, Washington cannot possibly know or fully control
how its aid and equipment will be used. How can effective oversight
exist in a country in which human rights activists, independent
journalists and academics are being systematically killed and threatened?
In which the government cannot even keep its own prosecutors safe?
Jo-Marie Burt is the editor of NACLA Report
on the Americas. This article was previously published in
NACLA. For more information about NACLA go to: http://www.nacla.org
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