The Prague Post - Colombian FARC leaders ordered to make reparations for over 21,000 kidnappings

EUR -
AED 4.358998
AFN 81.284956
ALL 97.298464
AMD 454.736051
ANG 2.125081
AOA 1088.414079
ARS 1744.162723
AUD 1.774754
AWG 2.139439
AZN 2.020991
BAM 1.966826
BBD 2.391708
BDT 144.579293
BGN 1.956391
BHD 0.447494
BIF 3495.505665
BMD 1.186929
BND 1.517971
BOB 8.206003
BRL 6.286331
BSD 1.187457
BTN 104.535023
BWP 15.797561
BYN 4.019029
BYR 23263.806805
BZD 2.390602
CAD 1.630811
CDF 3353.073746
CHF 0.932956
CLF 0.028675
CLP 1124.924038
CNY 8.444228
CNH 8.430506
COP 4590.601893
CRC 598.153245
CUC 1.186929
CUP 31.453616
CVE 110.981277
CZK 24.322725
DJF 210.941341
DKK 7.464916
DOP 74.179736
DZD 153.340548
EGP 57.070274
ERN 17.803934
ETB 171.45238
FJD 2.647148
FKP 0.872354
GBP 0.8692
GEL 3.206194
GGP 0.872354
GHS 14.540146
GIP 0.872354
GMD 85.45907
GNF 10278.804795
GTQ 9.1028
GYD 248.342205
HKD 9.235909
HNL 31.074113
HRK 7.533797
HTG 155.381066
HUF 389.666986
IDR 19478.690483
ILS 3.960966
IMP 0.872354
INR 104.313307
IQD 1554.876883
IRR 49925.202221
ISK 143.012843
JEP 0.872354
JMD 190.836614
JOD 0.841529
JPY 173.690427
KES 153.70413
KGS 103.795271
KHR 4757.210912
KMF 492.575166
KPW 1068.244782
KRW 1635.481883
KWD 0.361897
KYD 0.989547
KZT 642.11972
LAK 25697.01079
LBP 106289.485037
LKR 358.529917
LRD 210.946962
LSL 20.581457
LTL 3.504693
LVL 0.717962
LYD 6.427202
MAD 10.63785
MDL 19.664238
MGA 5305.572838
MKD 61.557245
MMK 2491.463107
MNT 4269.528434
MOP 9.519064
MRU 47.382271
MUR 53.720204
MVR 18.171722
MWK 2061.695469
MXN 21.713793
MYR 4.990445
MZN 75.856566
NAD 20.581683
NGN 1775.767367
NIO 43.595628
NOK 11.582776
NPR 167.255634
NZD 1.981999
OMR 0.456372
PAB 1.187457
PEN 4.129383
PGK 4.949275
PHP 67.387871
PKR 334.131466
PLN 4.249679
PYG 8473.394732
QAR 4.321312
RON 5.062494
RSD 117.197705
RUB 98.749126
RWF 1715.112287
SAR 4.45209
SBD 9.753073
SCR 17.512705
SDG 713.944008
SEK 10.951847
SGD 1.514022
SHP 0.93274
SLE 27.667194
SLL 24889.310308
SOS 678.332761
SRD 45.45879
STD 24567.032215
STN 25.073873
SVC 10.39016
SYP 15432.282247
SZL 20.580914
THB 37.589961
TJS 11.174243
TMT 4.166121
TND 3.422806
TOP 2.779904
TRY 49.034646
TTD 8.065214
TWD 35.683355
TZS 2937.649666
UAH 48.86793
UGX 4159.317115
USD 1.186929
UYU 47.696583
UZS 14599.22566
VES 190.202249
VND 31314.152195
VUV 141.462037
WST 3.276996
XAF 659.655023
XAG 0.027865
XAU 0.000321
XCD 3.207735
XCG 2.140097
XDR 0.825266
XOF 658.159848
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.329167
ZAR 20.588487
ZMK 10683.78678
ZMW 27.757609
ZWL 382.190628
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.39

    +0.29%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    24.46

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.7400

    70.88

    -1.04%

  • BCC

    -2.7300

    82.39

    -3.31%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    13.92

    -1.01%

  • BCE

    -0.2600

    23.43

    -1.11%

  • GSK

    -0.2500

    40.05

    -0.62%

  • RIO

    -0.2800

    63.44

    -0.44%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    55.79

    -0.43%

  • SCS

    0.0100

    16.88

    +0.06%

  • BP

    0.2200

    34.43

    +0.64%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    15.5

    -0.9%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    77.56

    -0.63%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.77

    -0.34%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    46.69

    -0.36%

Colombian FARC leaders ordered to make reparations for over 21,000 kidnappings
Colombian FARC leaders ordered to make reparations for over 21,000 kidnappings / Photo: JAIME SALDARRIAGA - AFP

Colombian FARC leaders ordered to make reparations for over 21,000 kidnappings

A Colombian court on Tuesday held seven leaders of the defunct Colombian guerrilla army FARC responsible for the kidnappings of tens of thousands of people during the group's half-century of war with the state.

Text size:

The transitional court, which was set up under a landmark 2016 peace agreement signed by FARC, spared the seven prison time, ordering them instead to make reparations by working towards reconciliation.

The Special Jurisdiction for Peace, known by its Spanish acronym JEP, took more than seven years to issue its findings against the leaders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), a Marxist group that waged a five-decade campaign of bombings, assassinations and kidnappings.

It found seven FARC commanders, including its last leader Rodrigo Londono Echeverri, alias Timochenko, guilty of 21,396 kidnappings.

The kidnappings constituted "war crimes, torture and cruel treatment," Judge Camilo Suarez told reporters in Bogota.

In a statement, the former FARC commanders described the kidnappings as "a moral burden that we will carry for many years" and said they were committed to the task of "repairing Colombian society."

The court ordered them to engage in eight years of activities to promote healing, to help locate missing victims of the conflict and to take part in mine clearance campaigns and other acts of restorative justice.

Their sentence is the maximum provided for under the peace deal.

But one prominent former FARC hostage, French-Colombian former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, said she felt "outraged, humiliated, mocked" by the ruling.

Betancourt was held by FARC for over six years in the jungle between 2002 and 2008.

The 63-year-old, who opposed the peace deal, accused the JEP of being "biased towards FARC."

- 'Open wounds' -

Soldiers, police officers, businesspeople and political leaders were nabbed by FARC over the course of its bloody campaign for a communist state and whisked off to bases deep in the jungle, sometimes never to return.

Suarez, the JEP magistrate, said that kidnapping "became a systematic practice" under FARC that left "open wounds that persist in families, in (rural) territories and in the daily life of the country."

One person was held for 14 years.

The JEP added that the kidnapping victims were mistreated and humiliated and that some were treated like slaves by the guerrillas.

As part of the peace deal, FARC members agreed to confess to their crimes and make reparations to the victims in exchange for being spared prison and being allowed to engage in politics.

A number of politicians and paramilitaries accused of human rights abuses during the conflict have also confessed to their crimes.

But many Colombians, including numerous kidnapping victims, bitterly opposed the deal, seeing it as too lenient on FARC.

The accord was rejected in a referendum but later ratified by Congress.

JEP's ruling comes as Colombia suffers its worst violence in a decade, with FARC dissidents who refused the peace deal and other armed groups stepping up their attacks on the state after the collapse of peace talks.

Over 130 soldiers and police were killed in such attacks between January and mid-August, defence ministry figures show.

In one of the worst recent attacks, conservative presidential candidate Miguel Uribe was shot in the head at a campaign event by suspected FARC dissidents.

He died of his injuries two months later.

L.Hajek--TPP