-Caveat Lector- an excerpt from; Death Beat Maria Jimena Duzan©1994 Peter Eisner, translator HarperCollins ISBN 0-06-017057-3 282 pps. – first/only edition – out-of-print --[3]-- 9 ZERO HOUR All the members of President Barco's cabinet entered the great rectangular meeting room in the Narino palace at precisely 11:30 on the morning of August 18, 1989, and took their places around the large Guayacan-laminated conference table reserved for the Council of Ministers. They looked toward the empty seat at the center of the table, reserved, according to protocol, for President Barco. Barco arrived promptly and launched into an announcement in his customary distant yet straightforward manner: "I want to inform you that a series of quite strong measures are being studied in response to the critical situation we face in the country today. And I want to sound out your opinions. I would, therefore, ask that none of you leave the palace this afternoon because I'm preparing a speech for television this evening and would like you to read it first." He then directed one of his aides to start reading the decrees. There was a nervous silence in the pale green room; the ministers could hear the sound of each breath they took. The Colombian leaders, whose portraits hung on the walls, were silent witnesses to this important occasion. This was to be one of the longest and most difficult meetings in recent Colombian history. Behind the president there was a portrait of Santander, known as the Man of Laws and as the conspirator who plotted unsuccessfully to take the life of Simon Bolivar, the Great Liberator. Bolivar's portrait did not hang here but had a place of honor elsewhere in the palace. Facing Santander were paintings of four of the fathers of Colombian independence: Camilo Torres, Jose Joaquin Camacho, Francisco Jose de Caldas, and Antonio Villavicencio. On the wall to the right there was a striking painting by Alejandro Obregon, the well-known Colombian artist. Entitled The Eagle of Violence, it depicts the destruction of the state under siege, synthesizing in an eloquent way the brutality that had traumatized the nation. Already suspecting that something extraordinary was taking place, the ministers realized quickly as the decrees were read to them that the measures Barco was proposing were without precedent. They amounted to a veritable declaration of war on drug terrorism. One measure authorized the seizure and detention of anyone who was suspected of dealing drugs or having committed acts of terrorism and the imprisonment of such persons incommunicado for up to seven days. Another measure authorized the seizure of the property of drug suspects, even before they were found guilty of a crime. Anyone whose name fraudulently appeared as the owner of any of these properties to hide the true owners would be punished with a fine and up to ten years in prison. Barco wanted to pull the rug out from under the drug dealers: to give more latitude to the security forces to pressure suspects and to obtain information without having to seek a court order to do so. The idea was to force them out of the safety of their hidden sanctuaries and draw them into the open. Barco's staff had scrutinized the decrees carefully, finding them legally airtight. But one decree had a specific intent all its own: The government would once again allow the extradition of drug dealers to the United States. The drug dealers had fought the resumption of extradition tooth and nail because it meant they could be tried and probably receive long prison sentences in the United States. At least one person at the meeting had known about the decrees before the meeting began. It was the young lawyer who was the newly appointed minister of justice, Monica de Greiff. Monica was eighth in the rapid succession of justice ministers in fourteen months, a turnover worthy of the Guinness Book of World Records. She was the first woman justice minister in Colombian history. "They named me because they were running out of justice ministers," said number seven, Guillermo Plazas Alcid, with a note of sarcasm. He lasted only four months in the job. De Greiff had been summoned prior to the general meeting by aides and given a copy of the decrees for review. She scarcely had time to read them when the president came into the antechamber, greeting her in his cold, stoic manner. >From behind his thick eyeglasses, he turned his gaze on de Greiff and asked, "Do you think the Supreme Court can rule the extradition decree unconstitutional in the manner it is presented here?" "No," she said. "The decree in judicial terms is irrefutable." The president said nothing. He moved on to another subject, saying that he had called a full cabinet meeting at 11:30 A.M. to present the decrees. Then he turned and walked out of the room. It was a classic game of poker, with only his closest personal advisers in on his strategy. Extradition was the ace up Barco's sleeve to be drawn at just the right moment. Only three of the cabinet ministers-Orlando Vazquez Velasquez, minister of the interior; General Oscar Botero, minister of defense; and de Greiff-had known about the decrees ahead of time, and they were informed only hours before. To avoid any chance that the Supreme Court might overturn his executive ruling, as it had done before, Barco based the new decree on what seemed to be an irrefutable principle: the right of the president to issue laws under a national state of siege-and no one would deny that the nation had been living under a state of siege for most of the previous forty years. The decree specifically suspended the article in the regular Colombian penal code that requires the application of an international treaty with corresponding countries for extradition to take place. That suspension allowed extradition to be authorized by executive order, bypassing the Supreme Court. It was immediately evident to everyone in the cabinet that if the president's intention was to revive extradition, the drug cartel would take the decree to be a direct declaration of war. And it was equally clear that this would be a war without quarter. No one spoke about it, but deep down, all the cabinet officers knew that this session could cost them their lives. There was a feeling in the country at the time that Colombia was overwhelmed by terrorism and that the government had lost its ability to cope with the drug trafficker-inspired violence. At the newspapers, we were writing about a new act of terrorism almost daily. In a way, what was happening in the cabinet meeting that day was a reflection of what was felt on the street. We Colombians knew that we had to take some momentous step-and that such a measure could have dangerous repercussions for all of us. That step had to be the resumption of extradition to the United States. Since July 1988, when Barco had decided to freeze the extradition process, until this day in August, drug-directed terrorism against the government had been gradually increasing. Since May, when General Maza Marquez had miraculously averted an assassination attempt, the violence had moved into the cities. In Bogota, the battle waged by Rodriguez Gacha to control the emerald trade had taken to the streets. More than a dozen people had been killed in July alone. And in a demonstration of the crudeness with which Rodriguez Gacha ran his private system of justice, among those attacked was the mayor of the town of Chia, located near Bogota, who was ambushed just minutes after he publicly denounced Rodriguez Gacha; luckily, he survived the attack. I was deeply affected by one attack because I knew the victims well. It took place at El Dorado Airport in Bogota on March 3, 1989, a Friday, at 6 pm., one of the busiest times of the week. A sicario assassin had gotten through security with a machine gun and emptied his magazine, firing at the leader of the Patriotic Union, Jose Antequera, a friend who had often come to my house for dinner and parties. He died on the spot. Such was the ferocity of the attack that three of the seven bullets that hit Antequera went through his body and wounded Ernesto Samper, a wellknown, high-ranking official of the Liberal party, and another close friend of mine, who had the bad luck to have stopped to talk to Antequera. Samper was seriously injured but survived. In the midst of the melee, the sicario was gunned down by Samper's bodyguard. Samper's wife rescued her husband, putting him on a luggage cart and leading him away. Protecting him with her own body, she took him to the hospital. These attacks were devastating. We were completely helpless. People were being killed not only by contract, but simply because they were on the street at the wrong time. I couldn't tell which was worse. To this day, Samper, who ran for president in the 1990 Liberal party primaries (and is a leading contender in 1994 presidential polling), still has four bullets lodged in his body. People joke that he carries the "heaviest artillery" of any presidential candidate. In Medellin the escalating drug terrorism began to target high-ranking government officials, as in July 1989 when the governor of Antioquia state was murdered on his way to the office. A bomb was detonated by remote control in his car; the force of the explosion was so strong that his body was almost disintegrated. This assassination caused particular outrage and disgust in Medellin, where the jovial, democratic-minded governor was universally respected and loved. Most outrageous of all was the way he died, torn to shreds, not even leaving a body to inter. During the months of July and August, there were three assassinations per week; judges were being picked off like ducks in a row. I was friends with many of these judges, or a friend of their friends, and we all felt the nightmare they were living through. All the judges had been involved in investigating the murders ordered by the cartel and the paramilitary squads. In most cases, when they got word they were targeted to be killed, they quickly issued arrest warrants against the drug bosses and then fled the country. But the judges who did not flee were killed. On Wednesday, August 16, 1989, a brazen assassination took place that would drive the judicial system over the brink. That afternoon Bogota Municipal Magistrate Carlos Valencia was assassinated after he indicted Rodriguez Gacha and Escobar for the murder of Guillermo Cano. The week before he was assassinated, Valencia had called Justice Minister de Greiff to ask for protection because of the constant threats he was receiving. De Greiff gave the order to protect Valencia with bodyguards and to provide an armored car. But on the day Valencia was gunned down as he left his office, the armored car still had not arrived. When Minister de Greiff arrived at the funeral services for Magistrate Valencia, she was forcibly prevented from entering. "Nobody wants you here," one of Valencia's relatives whispered to her. With Valencia's death, forty members of the judiciary had been murdered in three years. Valencia's killing provoked a new wave of indignation among his colleagues and associates. As a form of protest, judges who had drug cases before them submitted their resignations, charging that they could not operate under conditions in which their lives were constantly in danger. The organization that represented lawyers, judges, and their associates, the National Association of Jurists, besieged and disgusted by so many threats to its members, came out in favor of a massive resignation of Criminal Court judges to protest the lack of security. On August 18, the day that President Barco called the cabinet meeting to announce his war measures, ministers had been awakened at 6 A.M. with the news of yet another killing: the murder of Colonel Waldemar Franklin Quintero, commander of the Medellin metropolitan police. Franklin Quintero had been at the forefront of the fight against the drug dealers and their armies and therefore took his place on the drug bosses' hit list of the nation 's political leadership. The courts were on strike and the government, unable to stop the terrorism, was being held accountable for the violence. >From the moment at which the cabinet meeting began until 8 pm. that night, Barco, preparing for his televised address, neither spoke nor offered any opinion about what was taking place. Always impenetrable and unmoved, he dedicated himself to listening as each of his ministers talked about the decrees. The debate surrounding extradition grew, and tempers were on the rise. Tense, desperate, strained to the limits, the ministers were in the middle of a battle without knowing exactly who was fighting whom. Such was the menacing vise of the drug traffickers that the ministers even began to mistrust one another. They all measured what they said, fearing that someone present might have sold out to the drug bosses. "We all know what this decision means. The question is, knowing that, are we prepared to submit the country to what comes next?" asked Julio Londono, the foreign minister, talking about whether to accept the consequences of approving extradition. He put his finger right on the uncertainties they all feltand for which there was no convincing answer. For an instant, even President Barco, solid though he appeared throughout the day, seemed hesitant. The possibility that Barco might have doubts brought an immediate reaction from the ministers and aides who supported the measures. Some of them, including the minister of defense, went to the chambers where the president was waiting and again debated the subject behind closed doors. Such was the weight of this historic moment, however, that none of the ministers, not even those who had apprehensions about the desirability of extradition, considered the possibility of resigning. Everyone knew that with Barco one could not vacillate. Either you would convince the president with your arguments or you would go along with him and sign the decrees. At 5:30, when the president called once more for the Council of Ministers to read his speech, most of the decrees had been signed by everyone in the cabinet. The debate about the timing of the extradition treaty was closed, and the president was prepared to accept only one proposal made at the session, which was offered by Education Minister Manuel Becerra. "I believe that it is not possible to leave Monica de Greiff all by herself," he said. "If she is the one designated to sign the arrest warrants against the Mafia chiefs, it does not necessarily have to be her burden as well to sign the extraditions. It might be a good idea to have the extradition orders signed by the National Council on Narcotics." De Greiff felt relieved. The cabinet and the president approved that motion. Under the new formula, the ministers of justice, defense, agriculture, communication, health, and education would jointly sign authorizations for extradition. The proposal-or at least its source-surprised many of those in the chambers, since Becerra had previously served as president of the America soccer club in Cali owned by Miguel Rodriguez Orejuela, the brother of Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, the presumed chief of the Cali cartel. At the beginning of the Barco government, El Espectador had begun an investigation of Becerra. After he found out about it, he showed up at the newspaper one morning loaded with documents to prove that he no longer had any connection to the Cali soccer team and that even though Miguel Rodriguez Orejuela was the brother of the presumed chief of the Cali cartel, he was not facing any criminal charges and was a well-known public figure in the Cali sports world, which was indeed the case. A few months after Becerra's visit, Miguel Rodriguez Orejuela went underground-an indictment in which he was named had been issued in the United States. Nevertheless, the Becerra episode had been closed, and his explanation apparently had satisfied the president, who first named him governor of El Valle State, and later minister of education. Despite Barco's trust of Becerra, that day many ministers and aides, without saying so, looked upon him with certain reservations, especially when he warned that the extradition decree could lead to the unification of the Medellin and Cali cartels. "Extradition will put them under the same umbrella," he said. Yet if there had been any doubt concerning his commitment to the government's measures, his proposal had buried it. Ana Mena, the minister of mining, voiced another more general concern: "I would like assurances that the people extradited will be the chiefs and not the small fries." The ministers had repeatedly asked Defense Minister Botero and General Maza Marquez about their ability to place their forces on a virtual war footing against the drug bosses. The president, always imperturbable and impassive, looked toward his military chiefs, and responded, "The armed forces have the capacity to deal with this." Maza Marquez, who often attended these meetings as a de facto member of the cabinet, said that he was prepared to act strongly: "We are informed of the whereabouts of the bosses and we have the means to capture them. I think we can catch Pablo Escobar." The preoccupation about the armed forces' ability and commitment was quite valid. The national police and DAS were the lead agencies in the war on drugs, and they were facing up to the task. But during the first two years of the Barco administration, the army had been reluctant to enter the fray, arguing that the drug problem was eminently a police matter and that the army's involvement would only weaken its operations against guerrilla groups. Botero's predecessor as defense minister, General Guerrero Paz, had told the president on one occasion: "Listen, Mr. President, we are committed to support your policy of negotiating peace with M-19, but please do not ask us to get involved in drug interdiction." That statement was really a smokescreen for the hidden reality that army intelligence had been seriously compromised by the drug-trafficking organizations and that many brigade-level generals were being investigated for their relations with the drug militias. These new measures, established as wartime edicts, would codify the army's entry into the drug battle to face the same people with whom some members of the military were cooperating behind the scenes. "Upon their entry into the battle, the first thing they'll have to show is that they themselves are not corrupt," a high-ranking aide to Barco told me. "If they don't respond and get the job done, they're out." Barco read the assembled ministers the speech that he was going to deliver on television. It was already evening, and after the intense talks, the ministers listened silently, their faces showing weariness and strain. At around 8:30, moments before he was schedule to speak, the phone rang in the adjoining reception room, and General Maza Marquez was called out of the meeting. When he returned, one could immediately see that something had happened. Barco stopped reading as the general took the floor. "I have the sad duty to inform you, Mr. President, that there has just been a terrorist attack on Senator Luis Carlos Galan." For the first time, Barco's distressed, preoccupied look melted, and he seemed genuinely, personally struck by this shattering report. He withdrew to consult with Maza Marquez, and within ten minutes returned to the cabinet room and sat down. His face had once again taken on that look of remoteness and self-control. He then added a new first paragraph to the speech he was about to deliver. "I address you tonight to explain new measures adopted under stage-of-siege provisions, at a time in which, with justification, the nation finds itself indignant and distressed by the grave acts of violence which have taken place in recent days. Deplorably, Luis Carlos Galan, Liberal party presidential candidate, has been the target of yet another terrorist attack. Senator Galan has been taken to a hospital. We pray to God-for him and for the country—that he recovers from this difficult moment." Then he continued with the rest of his speech. "The criminal organizations and the drug dealers have unleashed a wave of murder and death. They have attacked representatives and leaders of every sector of the country and all its institutions. Judges, political leaders, soldiers, citizens, and public officials have been victims of this barbarity. The violence affects us all. It is not an offensive against the government or against the system of justice. It is a war on the nation. And for that reason, the nation must give its answer." Surrounded by his entire cabinet, the president read his speech live from the presidential palace, something that he had never done before. "Today more than ever we need to show that this is a joint decision. Now there is more reason than ever for us to be united," he told the ministers before the speech. As the president went on the air to read his announcement, Luis Carlos Galan was still alive. The very possibility that he might die drove Colombians over the brink-the announcement of the war measures and of the resumption of extradition was greeted with immediate and unanimous approval. "This is certainly a difficult moment," he said in closing his speech. "But there have been other such occasions, and Colombia has endured. We must not lose sight of our goal because that is what these violent men want to happen. To fall into despair is to play the game of the terrorists. We will carry on, decisively and firmly, rather than give in to arguments against a common enemy. We must win this battle. I am certain that we shall succeed." Less than an hour after the broadcast, Barco got the news that Senator Galan was dead. News of the attack on Galan reached me while I was at a diplomatic cocktail party, in the midst of a conversation with my colleague Enrique Santos Calderon and Philip McLean, who was the charge d'affaires at the U.S. embassy. All day rumors had been brewing that Barco was about to make a major policy address. The possibility that there would be a resumption of extradition spread through the press corps. We, like the rest of the nation, could sense that tough measures were about to be enacted. McLean had asked us what we had heard about Barco's impending speech, and we had argued the merits of resuming extradition. There were those who believed that McLean in his position as charge d'affaires was even more important than the ambassador himself. On receiving the news about Galan, McLean furrowed his brow and, with a gesture, motioned to his numerous bodyguards to prepare to leave immediately. As McLean left, he swept along with him the majority of government officials, academics, journalists, and presidential aides who were at the gathering. Ordinarily Galan himself would have been there, but he was on the campaign trail and had declined the invitation. He was on the hustings—a front-runner. That night, instead of sipping cocktails with diplomats, he was on a campaign swing through Soacha, a few miles from Bogota, as the Liberal party candidate for president. Some friends came back to my house around 8 pm. to monitor what was going on. The radio reports were confusing, so I telephoned Rafael Pardo, one of President Barco's aides. However, Pardo, in his customary clipped, serious tone, told me only what we were hearing on the radio: "He is apparently wounded, but we don't know what condition he is in. They're taking him to the hospital right now." When it was apparent that the president's office had no additional information for us, all we could do was sit in front of the television and await further news. A cameraman who had been covering the campaign swing to Soacha was able to capture the sad and dramatic footage of the attack. The power of the image, with all its devastating force, showed us in slow motion how Galan, one of the most protected men in the country, moved fatefully into the trap that had been prepared for him. The jostling crowd in Soacha's town square raised him on their shoulders: His face jubilant, his arms raised as if celebrating a battle victory, he was filled with vigor and energy. As he was hoisted to the stage, six assassins who were camouflaged in the crowd spread out to take their appointed positions. One of them, apparently located at the foot of the podium, fired three shots at Galan. One of the bullets perforated his aorta, producing internal hemorrhaging to such a degree that this wound alone almost certainly killed him. These shots were followed by volleys of gunfire. One of Galan's bodyguards threw himself to the ground to protect the already dying man with his own body. Swiftly Galan was taken to his armored limousine, which then raced to the nearest hospital. A Liberal party colleague, who helped carry Galan to the car, later said that his friend had still been conscious. "Don't let me die," Galan said, a distant gaze already descending upon his countenance. The president sent Eduardo Diaz, the minister of health, to Kennedy Hospital, where Galan lay wounded. Diaz was taken to the operating room, but as he donned hospital garb so that he could go in, an officer walked up to him and said, "Don't bother putting it on, Minister ... he's dead." Eduardo felt as if the world were collapsing on top of him. He went out immediately to call the president and inform him about what had happened, but he found that the few telephones available were occupied by radio reporters who already had begun to broadcast the news. He finally found a public phone and made the call. "He's dead, Mr. President. Dr. Luis Carlos Galan is dead." "Come back right away," was all Barco said to him. Eduardo went outside in the company of three other ministers who had arrived at the hospital after him. The crowds were surrounding the bulletproof cars of the ministers, blocking their way. For an instant Eduardo thought he would be dragged out and lynched. The radio was broadcasting the news, and people were weeping, disconsolate but angry. Eduardo finally found his carthe only one that was not armored-and got in with the other ministers, while one of the other ministerial cars was taken over by a group of supporters of the dead senator. Inside their car, the four ministers had an uncomfortable feeling of impotence, anger, sadness, and fear. President Barco called back his ministers for an extraordinary cabinet meeting. In the hall of the Council of Ministers one could sense the uncertainty that follows such a harsh blow. "Sadly, I must inform you that Senator Luis Carlos Galan has died," Barco said. At his side was Gabriel Rosas, a member of Galan's New Liberal faction who had served as minister of development and had accompanied Galan throughout his political career. Rosas could not hold back his tears. He had also gone to Kennedy Hospital and had seen his friend and political ally dead. "They have killed Galan, Dr. Rosas. Please take up his cause," one follower of Galan had implored him as he left the hospital. With the same pain and powerlessness that showed in his face when he met the Galan follower at the hospital, Rosas looked to Barco and said pleadingly, "Mr. President, what can we do? Help us! Help us!" "I want to express condolences to you, Gabriel, on behalf of the New Liberals ... this loss is deeply saddening for the country," Barco replied. Amid choking tears Rosas tried to answer, but the words came haltingly. "I am happy to have been one of the supporters of the measures that you have just announced. The death of my friend Luis Carlos confirms for me more than ever that the path we have taken is the appropriate one." The president turned to the minister of defense, Oscar Botero. "We have to move to the offensive. This is going to be quite a prolonged war. I am today establishing the Center for Joint Operations, an organization that will coordinate the three armed forces and which will function in all cases when we are engaged in war." "Yes sir, commander," Botero replied, calling Barco by his title as commander in chief of the armed forces. "We will begin immediately to search for the drug dealers and to occupy their properties." At that moment there was unanimity about the correctness of the wartime measures Barco adopted. The doubts of the few who might have vacillated were galvanized with the majority upon word of Galan's murder. All that could have been done had, in fact, been done. All that could have happened in a single day had, in fact, happened. Nevertheless, the situation of the country was such that, it was clear, more tragedies would follow. And with whatever came next even the harshest measures would seem to fall short. The president adjourned the cabinet session that evening with a final note: "Go home and get some rest because tomorrow is likely to be a very busy day," as if this one had not been long enough. One of nine children of a middle-class family and a descendant of the comunero (revolutionary), Galan, one of the first criollos to challenge authorities during the Spanish colonial period, Luis Carlos Galan was a unique figure in Colombian politics, dominated as it was by the offspring of families who were high in the hierarchies of power. A well-spoken, likable person, he had in a deft thirty-year career become one of the transcendent figures in national politics. Carlos Galan was still quite young when he came to the newspaper El Tiempo whe re he wrote his first stories as a cub reporter. At the paper he connected easily with a select group of reporters who not only became his inseparable friends, but also served as coconspirators in a romantic liaison he was developing. After work the group would usually go out together to chat, debating the political scene and the future. Gloria Pachon, a bright, selfassured young woman, had unwittingly left Luis Carlos hopelessly smitten, and he successfully courted her in the company of the entire press corps. They eventually married. I was introduced to Galan when I was fourteen, at a dinner organized by the principal of my high school. The principal was an unabashed admirer of Carlos Galan and had adopted at our school Galan's plan for joint governance by students and administrators, a policy that Luis Carlos had pushed for in the public university system to democratize internal debate. The idea was a novel one, but it did not last long. What began as power sharing quickly turned into anarchy, so the students' power was quickly reined in. Luis Carlos never found out that the same problem was the case at my school, which was privately run. Imbued with these new democratic airs and full of ourselves, we rebelled against the principal one day after she fired a teacher on grounds we thought were unjust. Under the umbrella of cogovernance we called a general strike. What followed closely paralleled the experience in the university system. Filled with indignation, the principal quickly lost her love for Galan's democratic experiment and expelled fifteen girls from the school. Not surprisingly, that was the last that was heard from our idealistic principal about joint control at our school. It was a minor issue, of course, but it seemed, in miniature, to reflect what was going on in the country. Neither at my school nor in the country at large were we prepared for so much democracy all at once. Galan was the first to recognize that problem. "I'm not interested in becoming president just for the sake of getting there," he said to me more than once. "What I have tried to do, above all, is to cultivate a process of political education so the nation and its citizens understand the value of democratic institutions and learn to use them to their own benefit." By 1978 Galan had become convinced that there had to be fundamental changes in the political structure, that the two traditional political parties had become wrapped in self-absorbed bureaucracies and converted into mere centers of political patronage. He decided, therefore, to found a dissident wing within the Liberal party and called it New Liberalism. His proposition from the outset was to seek changes in passe political habits, to infuse a new social consciousness in political life. It was an effort to modernize the Colombian state for the benefit of all Colombians rather than a handful. Galan was, above all, a liberal who knew how to analyze the values and aspirations of the long-suffering Colombian urban middle class. "Galan, more than a politician, was an idealist, a fundamentalist, a man of principles," said President Cesar Gaviria, who was his closest aide during the campaign and who was elected president in 1990. His political line found strong sympathies among college students and among those of their parents with liberal sentiments. These parents were solidly middle class, conservative in their habits, who paid their taxes religiously and saved every cent for their children's education. One could compare them to middle-class Americans who clip coupons for -the supermarket and pay their taxes regularly and have their own homes, although they never finish paying them off. Something was still lacking, however. As one leader of a grassroots barrio put it, "Galan still has to get down deeper, to get even closer to the real people." The truth is that in some of the barrios, like those of Medellin, the "real people" were being trained as some of the sicario assassins who would eventually kill the young political leader. For them, talk about democracy had not the slightest connection to reality. "All that stuff belongs to goodygoodies who have a mother and a father in the first place," one of these sicario gang members told me. Luis Carlos waged his first presidential campaign in 1982. He lost, although political analysts considered the large number of votes he received to be a broad triumph and a sign of things to come. But the victories were still hard to come by. Galan, who had always done well in public opinion polls, never matched expectations on election day. After he lost the parliamentary election in 1984, it was time for reflection and analysis. Many of his assumptions were revised, not so much in conceptual terms as in terms of organization. Luis Carlos decided it was time to start traveling, to move around the country once more. In 1986, after Barco was elected president, Galan took the most important step in his political career. After ten years of being a dissident, he decided to dismantle the barriers his faction had created within the party and join the mainstream once more. Although many of his colleagues resented his decision and saw it as a form of surrender, Luis Carlos used his acumen as a political leader not only to coax most of his fellow dissidents along with him, but also to set things up so he would be welcomed back into the fold. In large part his reentry was made possible by the great political affinity that existed between Galan and Barco. Both were virulent critics of a political echelon that had abandoned itself to bureaucracy; both had tangled with the power structure because of that stand. Barco saw in Galan a powerful ally for his policies and a stalwart defender of his administration. They were united not only by their beliefs and by their roots in the same part of the country, Santander, but by their same preoccupations. One of the main ones was the threat of drug trafficking. By the end, their personal contact had been on the rise. Barco, who rarely used the telephone, not even to speak with his own ministers, spoke almost daily with Luis Carlos. At the time of his death, Luis Carlos was clearly at his zenith. He had successfully bridged the fundamental gap between dissidence and political reality: He had done what had to be done. Now back inside the party, he had begun an aggressive new campaign. Three days before his death, opinion polls had given him a clear preference among Colombians to be the next president. Nothing appeared to stand in his way. Gloria was already in bed when she was informed of the attack on Luis Carlos by her secretary, Lucila. She hung up the phone and got dressed quickly while she called to the children to get ready to leave for the hospital. The whole time she had been telling herself that nothing bad had happened to Luis Carlos. They got to the Social Security Hospital at around 9 Pm. She remembered being besieged by people asking for Luis Carlos's blood type, which she told them was A negative, a relatively uncommon type. Rumors were still circulating that he had been wounded in one arm and that he was not seriously hurt. She kept telling herself that these stories were true. And she was conscious of not wanting to scare the children. Finally someone came up to her and said that Luis Carlos wasn't even at this hospital, that he had been taken to Kennedy Hospital, which was closer to where the attack had taken place. She left immediately. When she arrived, there were many people milling about waiting to find out about their political leader. Gloria and the children were taken to a room where the bodyguards had also been taken. She was told that one of the bodyguards, who had used his body to shield Luis Carlo, was dead, as was the Soacha city councilman, who was killed instantly in the volley of gunfire. But no one said anything about Luis Carlos. Finally, a doctor came up to her and led her to an adjoining room. She motioned for the children to follow. And then, through a half-open door, she could just make out Luis Carlos lying on a bed. The doctor grasped her arm and led her to one corner of the room. "I'm sorry to have to tell you that your husband has died." Only at that moment did Gloria realize that Luis Carlos had been dead all along and that no one had dared to break the news to her. She looked at the children and felt profound grief enveloping her. Luis Carlos would never be able to fulfill the promise he always made to them when they complained he was spending too little time with them. She recalled the words he repeated when he needed to find a way to talk himself out of their complaints: "There will be time, there will be time, for us to enjoy ourselves like a normal family." One year after the death of Luis Carlos, I interviewed Gloria in her apartment in Paris, where she had been sent by the government to serve as Colombian ambassador to UNESCO. Tears came to her eyes when she recalled that night. What she had felt, she said, was so terrible that she was still unable to express it. "It is as if I myself had been killed. From that point on, I started living something else, a life that had been given to me on loan, as if I were no longer myself. As if they had taken my life away from me." On the day he died, Luis Carlos left home as he always didquickly, without eating breakfast or having time to chat with the boys as he sometimes was able to do. As always, Gloria recalled, he was in a good mood. Gloria noticed nothing strange. Or perhaps it was that she had decided to not worry anymore about security. Gloria had spoken with Luis Carlos three times during that day. One of those times it was to remind him that he had to discipline Juan Manuel, their oldest son, who apparently had left the house the night before without permission. For several weeks, ever since Luis Carlos had received indications that something might happen to his children, he had ordered them to stay home after they returned from school. But Juan Manuel, in the full bloom of his sixteen years, disobeyed his father's orders and went to visit his girlfriend. The other thing that Gloria had told him was that he should avoid climbing up on trucks and should not let people raise him on their shoulders-an act that seemed especially dangerous to Gloria. Gloria never remembered seeing Luis Carlos nervous about security questions. Nevertheless, she now thinks that he avoided talking about all the threats he received so he would not worry her excessively. But she remembered that after the murder of Guillermo Cano in December 1986, he said something that left a deep imprint on her. "I am condemned," he told her. Around the time of Cano's death, Luis Carlos decided to leave the country for a while. He had said that what was going on in Colombia was absurd and that he would have to stay away. DAS was constantly discovering ambushes planned against him. Whenever particularly solid information was available, they warned him to take special precautions. At the time, I lived down the street from the Galans, and I could always tell when something was going on because the security provisions around their apartment would be increased. Every morning I could hear the caravan of security vehicles and armored cars leaving the garage next door. I remember one day counting twenty-five bodyguards. Threats that went beyond the routine, that spoke directly of attempts on Galan's life, began to surface in August 1989. Oddly enough, no one gave them much credibility. Luis Carlos had heard them all and decided to go ahead with the campaign swing. It was only after the attempt on his life in Medellin on August 6 that Gloria saw him really worried for the first time. He was in MedelIin participating in a forum at the University of Antioquia when the chief of police pulled him aside. "We have just broken up a plot to kill you. Don't be alarmed now because we have everything under control," he told the presidential candidate. One block from the university, the police had discovered an abandoned vehicle equipped with a grenade, two rockets ready for firing, two revolvers, and a radio communications system. The car was found at a spot where the motorcade carrying GaIan and Minister of the Interior Orlando Vazquez Velasquez were to pass by. An anonymous phone call to the police enabled them to find the assailants who had planned the attack in the barrio of Manrique, one of the slum districts that surround Medellin. Many of the sicario assassins contracted by the drug Mafia live in Manrique and the other outlying slums. Like all makeshift squatter areas, Manrique was built on the side of a mountain. The streets were not really streets but steep labyrinths that hid the sicarios when authorities or rival gangs tried to move in on them. The police found these men, however, and managed to surround them. Three suspects were captured after a gun battle in which one policeman was killed. The group confessed to having planned to launch one rocket against Galan's car and one against that of his lead bodyguards, using the grenade to finish them off, if necessary, or to cover their flight. Knowing that Galan had planned to come to Medellin, they had concocted the scheme weeks in advance. The men were working with a $400,000 war chest to carry out the attack. Luis Carlos returned from Medellin anxious and upset. What perhaps troubled him most was that even though the news media had published every detail of the assassination plot in Medellin, many people dismissed the entire affair. Others thought that the frustrated plot had been directed not against Luis Carlos Galan but against the minister of the interior. Gloria simply had no idea what was going through Luis Carlos's mind. If he had really been anguished and distressed, he would have suspended campaigning. But he chose not to do so. Few knew that Luis Carlos leaned toward the metaphysical and had a particular interest in the influence of the stars. He had his horoscope read in early August, as I knew because we went to the same astrologist, Mauricio Puerta. Among other things, Puerta had followed the astrological movements during the peace talks between the government and the M-19 guerrillas. Frequently, on his own initiative, he informed government negotiators about his astrological readings. According to Puerta, Luis Carlos, a Libra with Libra in the ascent, was facing a violent convergence on the days in question. Mars, the god of war, was passing through the Twelfth House, where hidden enemies reside. That, in laymen's terms, meant that his life was in danger. Perhaps recalling his fateful astrological chart, GaIan had put on his bulletproof vest that night, en route to Soacha, thinking that the precaution could avert his destiny with death. The day after his death, Galan's body was borne to the Plaza of Bolivar in the center of Bogota, which was packed with thousands of Galan's supporters. When Barco and his ministers arrived, they were reviled with contemptuous jeers. "Justice, justice!" came the shouts from the throngs of people crying for the fallen candidate. "Assassin! Assassin!" they called out as the scornful shouts rose in pitch. One felt both the affinity people had for GaIan and the atmosphere of hostility his death provoked toward the government. The people felt orphaned and were deeply outraged at the drug Mafia. I joined the huge line of Colombians who were marching to pay their final respects to Galan in the\ Congress of the Republic. As I stood there, I recalled how Colombia was filled with contradictions. In this same spot, five years earlier, Pablo Escobar, as an elected alternate representative, had gone head to head with Galan's uncompromising New Liberalism. I felt afraid because for the first time there seemed no way to halt the onslaught of a narco-controlled state. I was not sure we were strong enough to fight back. The assassination of Luis Carlos Galan was felt in Colombia much the same way that the killing of Benigno Aquino was felt in the Philippines, or the murder of Pedro Joaquin Chamorro was felt in Nicaragua. It was a blow that made Colombians react in unison as never before, that filled them with an indignation that surprised the drug dealers themselves. GaIan's murder convinced Colombians to go along with the only weapon that the drug Mafia feared: extradition to the United States. One week later, the Supreme Court would declare that Barco's extradition measures were constitutional in what was considered the ultimate endorsement of his policy. "With Luis Carlos's death, we lost not only our present, but our future," declared former President Misael Pastrana. Fear had been replaced by furor. In Washington, Barco's decision was received with jubilation. At the White House, President Bush immediately declared his unlimited support for "the war on drugs declared by the people of Colombia and their president." One week after the death of Galan, the declaration of a war on drugs by Colombia and the United States was the top item in the news around the world. >From one moment to the next, Colombia saw itself invaded as never before by news media from around the world. Many of the reporters who came already knew Colombia and thus were not surprised to see people walking down the streets, cars driving around the city, and people dancing salsa in discotheques. But since Colombia had always been in obscurity with little news interest, the large majority of the reporters sent to the country had not the slightest idea of what they would face. A crew from one American television network showed up at the newspaper wearing bulletproof vests. Others, assuming that Pablo Escobar walked freely about on the street, called to ask for his telephone number, as if an interview could be set up as easily with Escobar as with a Hollywood movie star. In late August 1989, I came across a story in the French newspaper Liberation. It was prominently displayed on the front page with a headline that must have surprised Escobar himself WORLD EXCLUSIVE: AN INTERVIEW WITH THE CHIEF DRUG BOSS, PABLO ESCOBAR. The report was wrong from beginning to end. The exalted world exclusive with Pablo Escobar was in reality an interview that my friend and fellow reporter Hernando Corral had conducted with another drug boss, Gonzalo Rodriguez Gacha, the Mexican. The French correspondent had gotten the names mixed up. In short order, this invasion by the news media managed to alter Colombia's image. Colombia's problems were not well understood; nobody knew who was who in the cartels; it was not clear whether the country was governed by Pablo Escobar or Barco. The only thing anyone knew was that Bush and Barco had declared a war on drugs in a country called Colombia. This declaration of war, which the world celebrated optimistically by way of their television screens, came across differently in Colombia. A few days after the measures were approved, the entire Barco cabinet began receiving the first telephone death threats at their homes. "No matter how many bodyguards you have, we are going to kill you. We know the position of the Council of Ministers on extradition, and we have infiltrated palace security," said a letter signed by the Extraditables. If there was any lingering doubt as to whether their lives were in danger, that ended with the swiftness of the threats. "The day we signed the first extradition order I was completely certain that they would kill me," one of the cabinet ministers told me. That minister had suffered heart spasms because of the all the pressure he was under. The concern about death that the ministers felt was even more evident on the streets and in places of business. The war of nerves intensified even more when a communique from the Extraditables was sent to the news media, declaring total war on the oligarchy and on all Colombians who supported extradition. While the nations of the world sent their messages of solidarity to President Barco on his decision to fight drugs, the government announced in the news media a reward of $200,000 for anyone who could provide information on the whereabouts of Pablo Escobar and Gonzalo Rodriguez Gacha. Throughout Colombia, one could smell death and perceive the inequality of the before us. I was waiting for the next act of violence. pps. 140-160 ----- Aloha, He'Ping, Om, Shalom, Salaam. Em Hotep, Peace Be, Omnia Bona Bonis, All My Relations. Adieu, Adios, Aloha. Amen. Roads End DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright frauds is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. 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