Colombia Unearthing Plight of Its ‘Disappeared'


By
<http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=JUAN%20FORERO&fdq=199601
01&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=JUAN%20FORERO&inline=nyt-per> JUAN FORERO

New York Times

August 10, 2005





Panos for The New York Times


One of the graves dug up by Colombian authorities on El Palmar, a big farm
outside San Onofre. The dead are believed to be militia victims.

 

SAN ONOFRE, Colombia - In one of the most horrific chapters of Colombia's
long civil conflict, investigators are unearthing scores of bodies from
secret graves dotting this humid cattle-grazing region near the Caribbean,
the victims of right-wing paramilitary groups now benefiting from generous
concessions for pledging to disarm.

With dozens of people coming forward in recent months to complain of missing
relatives, government and military officials now estimate that hundreds of
poor farmers may have been killed and secretly buried in a terror campaign
that began in the late 1990's. 

The paramilitary groups, they say, kidnapped and killed their victims to
seize land and in some cases weed out supporters of the Marxist guerrillas
who have been fighting the government since the 1960's.

For years, fear kept the crimes hidden. But with the arrival this year of a
new military commander who has secured the region, families finally began
speaking out, despite lingering dangers that cost the life of one
whistleblower earlier this year. 

So far, 72 bodies have been recovered from El Palmar, a vast farm outside
San Onofre that was used as a local base by the paramilitary forces, whose
militias control several coastal states. 

>From the dark, moist earth, the authorities have also uncovered bodies in
several other villages and are working to locate graves in five other
states, said Elba Beatriz Silva, coordinator of the attorney general's human
rights office, which is overseeing a gradual process of exhumations that may
expand even further.

"A lot of people here have disappeared - sons, fathers, mothers, brothers,"
said Iván Wilches, 22, whose brother disappeared. "Every day there were
people killed. They would pull them out of houses, breaking down doors. They
would all wind up dead."

The discoveries have highlighted a brutal but overlooked component of
Colombia's war - the disappearances of more than 3,500 people in recent
years - and raised fresh questions about whether there will ever be justice
for the killings.

The authorities say they have arrested 11 paramilitary fighters from the
area who face criminal charges. But the two suspected masterminds, according
to local people and government authorities, are benefiting from a new
Justice and Peace Law that offers them leniency in exchange for disarming. 

The two commanders- Edward Cobos and his lieutenant, Rodrigo Mercado Pelufo,
who ran the local 600-member militia - are ensconced in a government-run
safe haven for 50 paramilitary commanders and could serve sentences as short
as two years. 

They and other militia members are not obliged to provide details of their
crimes. If the authorities do press charges, the law gives them only 60 days
to build cases, something that human rights groups say will be nearly
impossible.

The government, which has tried and failed for years to negotiate an end to
the conflict with the guerrillas, says the new law is needed to demobilize
some 15,000 paramilitary fighters throughout the country who have taken up
arms in recent years, adding to the violence. 

The law has ignited fierce objections from those who fear that it will lead
to a whitewash of some of the worst atrocities of a 41-year civil conflict
in which 200,000 people have died. Until now, most notice was given to
massacres and the assassination of politicians. But little attention has
been paid to the what is known as the "disappearing" of people, something
more commonly associated with other Latin American conflicts, from El
Salvador to Brazil to Argentina in past decades, when it was used mostly by
military governments wanting to silence adversaries and sow fear among
civilians.

Since the 1990's, the tactic has been used with increasing frequency in
Colombia, too. The Colombian Commission of Jurists says that 3,588 people
vanished in this country from 1996 to 2004. The United Nations Working Group
on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, which visited Colombia in July,
has investigated nearly 1,200 cases, including those in San Onofre.

Many of the killings here are attributed to a paramilitary unit calling
itself the Heroes of the María Mountains, which the two commanders ran. The
attorney general's office says that the group was engaged mostly in drug
trafficking and corrupting local officials and that the killings helped it
seize poor farmers' land and control cocaine trafficking corridors to the
Caribbean.

Officials say the paramilitary groups also took aim at those they accused of
aiding the rebels, the few who dared complain, small-time criminals and even
their own fighters who fell out of favor.

"They were taken to that farm, where they were given an absurd sentence, not
even a trial, since they were already condemned, and they were then killed
in the most horrific of ways," said Ms. Silva, of the attorney general's
human rights office. 

Because the local authorities and rogue military officers were suspected of
working with the militias, for years almost no one in the area said a word
in protest, said families who have in recent weeks told the authorities
about missing relatives.

"Everyone knew about this, but no one said anything, because if you did
they'd come at 3 or 4 in the morning and take you away," said Lorenza
Cárdenas, 60, the mother of José Luis Olivo, who disappeared two years ago
and is believed to be buried somewhere nearby. "Here, if you talked, you
died."

The fear began to dissipate this year only after a hard-charging marine
colonel, Rafael Colón, was given command of the local marine base, residents
said. Rooting out paramilitary forces as zealously as they did Marxist
rebels, the marines instilled a sense of order.

That prompted one family, the Verbels, to gather others in town who knew
about the graves to come forward. "Here, everyone knew about the graves, and
we reported them," said Hermes Verbel, 43, one of eight brothers who
organized the villagers. "Everyone knew how the paramilitaries took land,
took people's cattle." 

For their daring, the Verbel family paid a high price: the killing of one of
the brothers, Guillermo, 52, in January. But by then the death only
energized villagers. More came forward from neighborhoods like Alto Julio in
San Onofre, where nearly every family in the ramshackle barrio can speak of
a relative who has disappeared.

Iván Wilches's brother, Mauricio, 16, was snatched off the street a year
ago. Fidencio Berrio, 67, recalled that his son, Andrés, 42, went out to
make a phone call in 2002 and never came back.

Maruja del Carmen Pestana lost two sons, and Hermenijirda Julio said her
son, Jairo Luis Alta Miranda, was grabbed by gunmen from the local
bullfighting ring in 2003.

"We don't know where our loved ones are," said Mariela Medina, whose father,
José Torres, 60, worked on El Palmar and disappeared in 1997. "We know they
were taken, we know they are dead, but we don't know anything more."

For now, the authorities are searching for graves with the help of the
families of the victims and informants like Feliciano Yepes, a former
paramilitary commander now in prison. He has led investigators to one grave
after another.

"There are approximately 500 people buried on that farm," Mr. Yepes said,
according to a government deposition, "among them delinquents, farmers who
did not collaborate and also paramilitaries."

Still the families of the missing continue to arrive and make their claims
in the small local command post of the attorney general's office, providing
clerks with details about the victims and identifying features. So far, only
two bodies have been positively identified, though DNA samples have been
taken from 46 villagers so they can be compared with those of the skeletal
remains.

"We all want this so much," Ms. Cárdenas said. "A mother feels the pain, and
all mothers wonder what happened to their son, where they are."

Just outside San Onofre, El Palmar ranch is now peaceful and still. Orlando
Pascua, 33, one of the farmers working there, led visitors to the stables,
where the militias have dug deep holes. The boot of one victim had been
tossed to the side. Several hundred feet away, the militias had buried more
people under a tree.

Mr. Pascua said that he and the other farmers were trying to forget what
happened, but that it was not easy. "People say they did so much damage," he
said. "When you were brought here, you didn't get out."

Jenny Carolina González contributed reporting from Bogotá for this article.




 


Panos for The New York Times


Relatives of the missing in the Alto Julio district of San Onofre.
Foreground, Maruja del Carmen Pestana and Apolina Julio Julio. Standing
against wall, from left: Rosa Campo, Belarmina Torres and Hermenijirda
Julio.

 



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