Deutsche Welle, 4 November 2012
Savior of
the fatherland or unscrupulous murderer? Colombia's ex-president Alvaro Uribe
is coming under pressure as more and more of his staff are revealed to have
worked with paramilitary squadrons.
For many
Colombians, Alvaro Uribe is a hero. The security situation in the country
improved dramatically during his presidency from 2002 to 2010.
When Uribe
took office, Colombia was seen as a failed state. The leftist guerrilla groups
FARC and ELN were stronger than ever. Armed confrontations with the military
were a regular occurrence. Many Colombians were afraid to leave the towns and
cities. Guerrillas lay in wait on the cross-country roads, ambushing and
kidnapping travelers.
Uribe
decided to pursue a military approach to ending the decades-old conflict between
state and guerrillas. More personnel were recruited into the Colombian armed
forces, and the government invested heavily in weapons and equipment.
Now, in
2012, the guerrillas are considerably weakened. According to estimates by the
Colombian military there are only around 8,000 guerrilla fighters left. 12
years ago this figure was more like 18,000. Travel is possible once again: the
main cross-country routes are now relatively safe. Soldiers patrol the spots
where the FARC and ELN used to erect road blocks. Peace talks are taking place
on Cuba this month between the FARC and the Colombian government. The economy,
too, on the way up: the improvement in the security situation has encouraged
investors to return.
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| Coming under pressure: Alvaro Uribe as he spoke to the military in Bogota |
Violence
and counter-violence
But this
improvement has come at a price. The guerrillas' retreat was paralleled by the
rise of right-wing paramilitaries, private armies originally formed and
employed by big landowners. The Colombian judiciary believes that these
paramilitaries killed around 150,000 people during the campaign against the
guerrillas. They allegedly massacred innocent people with chainsaws,
depopulated entire regions, and seized their victims' land and property.
The
paramilitaries frequently acted in conjunction with the military and the
political establishment. This cooperation is something that human rights
activists have been denouncing for years, but it took a very long time for a
legal reappraisal to get off the ground. Judges and state prosecutors were
reluctant to investigate. There was too much political influence involved, and
lawyers were afraid of violent retribution.
![]() |
| Rito Alejo Del Rio was sentenced to a hefty jail term |
Recently,
however, a series of spectacular trials have taken place. At the end of August
the former general Rito Alejo del Rio was sentenced to 26 years in jail. Del
Rio was a military commander in the western Uraba region during the mid-1990s.
At the same
time, according to prosecutors, he was also the leader of the local
paramilitary. Del Rio was accused of providing the militias with both
infrastructure and personnel. Eye-witnesses reported seeing joint patrols by
the army and the militia.
During this
period, there were a number of massacres among the civilian population of
Uraba. At the time del Rio was active there, Alvaro Uribe was the governor of
the region. The general is regarded as one of the military leaders who was
closest to Uribe.
The
president and the paramilitaries
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| Mauricio Santoyo admitted collaboration with the paramilitary |
So far the
prosecutors have not yet investigated Uribe himself - but they are circling
ever closer.
Jorge
Noguera, for example, was head of Colombia's domestic secret service (DAS)
during Uribe's presidency. Noguera has been sentenced to 25 years in prison.
During his time in office, the secret service was infiltrated by
paramilitaries. Then there is Maria del Pilar Hurtado, another former head of
the DAS. Hurtado evaded justice by fleeing to Panama. She had initiated the
illegal wiretapping of judges, politicians and human rights activists who stood
in Uribe's way. Information obtained from the wiretaps was then passed on to
the paramilitaries.
The most
recent example is the case of Mauricio Santoyo. The chief of police was the
head of security from 2002 to 2005, and one of then-president Uribe's most
trusted confidants. Santoyo recently confessed that he had collaborated with
the paramilitaries.
"This
is the ultimate proof that the key elements of paramilitarism were controlled
from within the presidential palace," believes Ivan Cepeda, a member of
parliament and critic of Uribe. "We're not talking about some unimportant
official here. Santoyo had access to all of the key aspects of national security
policy."
Santoyo
took part in all of Uribe's cabinet meetings. The chief of police wiretapped
his colleagues, and passed on information about upcoming police operations to
the paramilitaries. They are also active in the drugs trade, and among other
things Santoyo also made sure that drug consignments would arrive safely at
their destinations.
Uribe's
defense
![]() |
| A memorial to victims of state violence in Medellin |
Alvaro
Uribe rejects all accusations that he was connected to the paramilitaries, and
insists that he knew nothing of the machinations of his ally Santoyo either.
"Ask General Santoyo whether I or my ministers ever set him a bad
example," the former president declared.
Juan Manuel
Galan, a senator in the Colombian Congress, doesn't believe Uribe's declaration
of innocence. "Alvaro Uribe personally made Santoyo both a general and his
security adviser. That's why Uribe can't play dumb now and say he didn't know
who this man was and what he was doing."
Uribe named
Santoyo as his security adviser even though Santoyo was already a controversial
figure accused of involvement in illegal wiretapping. As chief of the
anti-kidnapping unit, Santoyo had tapped the phones of human rights
organizations. Two activists were kidnapped and murdered by the paramilitaries,
and their human rights organization suspects that information gleaned from the
phonetapping was passed on to the murderers.
Nonetheless,
Alvaro Uribe's position is still relatively secure. He still has many
supporters. However, Colombia's neighbor Peru has shown that immunity from
prosecution does not last indefinitely, even for ex-presidents. The former
Peruvian president Alberto Fujimori is now doing time for corruption and human
rights violations, including the deployment of death squads. He, too, was once
regarded as a shining light and beacon of hope for his country.





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