Colombian security forces take down FARC terrorist kidnapping ring
Thu, 02/16/2012 - 21:27 — AmericasForum.com
 FARC terrorist leader "Timochenko" reads a declaration from the Marxist terrorist group's high command.
BOGOTA - The National Police force of Colombia busted a kidnapping ring operated by the terrorist group FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionaria de Colombia), officials announced on Thursday.
The takedown of the kidnappers was the result of simultaneous raids in Bogota, Giron, Neiva and Santander.
Colombian terrorist group FARC kills 12-year-old child in car bombing
Sun, 01/15/2012 - 00:28 — AmericasForum.com

NORTE DE SANTANDER - The Colombian terrorist group FARC is suspected of setting off a car bomb in a terrorist attack that killed a 12-year-old child and a 21-year-old girl, as well as a female bystander that was near the blast.
Colombian authorities place the blame on the FARC's 33rd Front, which has been active in the area with a number of attacks on civilians.
FARC threatens passengers, burns 2 busses
Thu, 12/29/2011 - 22:45 — AmericasForum.com

ANTIOQUIA - Members of the 36th Front of Colombia's FARC terrorist group set two civilian passenger buses on fire Thursday in the department of Antioquia.
The terrorist attack took place on the road from Puerto Valdivia to Taranza, where terrorist operatives stopped the buses, forced the passengers out, and set them ablaze.
The police chief from the area told the media that the area was cleared and the road was re-opened several hours after the attack took place.
The same set of FARC terrorists bombed power lines on Tuesday in an area not far from where Thursday's attack occurred.
The FARC is listed as a terrorist group by the United States and the European Union, and survives from the proceeds of narcotrafficking, kidnapping civilians, and by charging "revolutionary taxes" to small business owners in the areas where they set up camps to avoid detection by the Colombian Armed Forces.
Colombian terrorist group FARC bombs two power lines in civilian areas
Wed, 12/28/2011 - 22:55 — AmericasForum.com
 FARC terrorist leader Timoleon Jimenez, aka 'Timochenko'.
ANTIOQUIA - The Colombian terrorist group FARC bombed two power line towers on Tuesday, leaving three municipalities in the northern part of the Antioquia department without power for several hours, according to media reports out of Colombia.
The terrorist attack on civilian infrastructrue was said to have been committed by FARC's 36th Front, which is known for kidnapping, extortion and the murder of civilians in the area.
The resulting loss of power affected the municipalities of Ituango, San Andres, Peque and the village of El Valle de Toledo, where a number of hospitals and emergency service stations were left unable to treat patients.
Hostage executed by FARC terrorist group left illustrated storybook for daughter
Sun, 12/18/2011 - 19:05 — AmericasForum.com
 Viviana, the daughter of murdered hostage Edgar Yesid Duarte, shows one of the detailed drawings that her father drew in the 177 page book of morality tales that he left for his daughter in case of his death at the hands of the terrorist group that held him hostage for 13 years in the jungles of Colombia.
In 1998, Edgar Yesid Duarte had worked his way up to captain as a member of Colombia's National Police, and had been married for just 36 months to his bride Susy when he was taken hostage by the left-wing terrorist group FARC.
Edgar and Susy had a baby girl that they named Viviana, who never got to know her father before he was taken away for the execrable extortion racket that has been honed into a profitable enterprise by the FARC and its collaborators in Colombia and neighboring countries.
After a decade of being held hostage by the FARC, suffering the forced marches through the unforgiving Colombian jungle with chains wrapped around his neck, Edgar knew that the chances of surviving long enough to see his daughter again were remote.
FARC terror group declares that it will release hostages after massive protests
Tue, 12/06/2011 - 23:28 — AmericasForum.com

BOGOTA - The Colombian terror group FARC announced Tuesday its intention to release an unspecified number of hostages, in a statement released hours after tens of thousands of people marched in major cities calling for an end to kidnappings.
President Juan Manuel Santos said that he was not willing to exchange any jailed terrorists in excahge for hostages, as the terrorist group had suggested, but he said that he was open to a future dialogue if there are signs of "true political will."
In a message without much detail, the FARC communique promised "the unilateral release of prisoners of war that we announced in our earlier letter, even though some of them were killed in the senseless military rescue attempt, " The message came in a letter released Tuesday on the Marxist terrorist group's website (www.farc-ep.co).
The FARC tried to claim that four hostages killed on November 26th were the result of the a military attack on their camp. The Colombian military found the bodies of three policemen and Army Sergeant Jose Libyan Martinez, the oldest guerrilla hostage, who had been held hostage since December 21, 1997.
"We deeply regret that four of the six prisoners of war that we would unilaterally release (...) have died in an irrational attempt to rescue them by the Colombian army, as they marched to the place that we were planning to deliver them," the communique stated.
Colombians march against FARC terrorist group in 32 cities
Tue, 12/06/2011 - 16:20 — AmericasForum.com

BOGOTA - Tens of thousands of Colombians marched against the narco-terrorist group FARC in 32 cities today to demand the release of all hostages kidnapped by the terrorist group, and to protest the murder of four hostages last month.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by its initials as the FARC, began in 1964 during a time of political turmoil in Colombia, and has since evolved into a Marxist terror operation that survives on the international cocaine trade.
Since former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe began an effort to aggressively fight the FARC nearly a decade ago, the group has built upon its international contacts to fight a media and legal war against the Colombian state, and against Uribe himself.
The FARC, after suffering the death of a number of its leaders over the last two years, has vowed to continue its violent "struggle" against the Colombian State and against ordinary Colombians, whose children are often forced into service in its ranks.
Colombia arrests 3 FARC terrorists who kidnapped 10 year old from mother's arms
Fri, 12/02/2011 - 00:33 — AmericasForum.com

5000 citizens turned up on Sunday to march in support of the rescue of 10 year old Nohora Munoz, kidnapped on
BOGOTA - Colombian police have arrested three members of the FARC terrorist group for the kidnapping of 10-year-old Nohora Valentina Munoz that occurred last September.
The 10-year-old Nohora was snatched from her mother's arms while she walked the child to school in Fortul, a small town near Colombia's border with Venezuela.
The FARC terrorist group, which derives millions a year from kidnapping and narcotrafficking, held the child for 18 days before international pressure and negotiations by the Red Cross forced them to release her to authorities.
Police Director General Oscar Naranjo said the three terrorists that were now in custody for the kidnapping belonged to the 54th Front of the FARC.
Rafael Correa challenges Alvaro Uribe to a lie detector test on FARC collaboration
Tue, 11/22/2011 - 12:26 — AmericasForum.com

QUITO - The president of Ecuador, Rafael Correa, today challenged former Colombian president Alvaro Uribe to join him in taking a lie detector test to disprove that Correa had maintained a "benign" position with the FARC, provided that he also answer questions about Colombian paramilitaries and drug traffickers.
In a meeting with the foreign press, Correa accused Uribe of "throwing insults" and said his foreign minister, Ricardo Patino, had answered "as he should." Patino had called Uribe a "liar" and "unbalanced," after the former Colombian president had stated that Correa had maintained a "benign position" against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and had "aroused suspicion" that he was sympathetic to the narcoterrorist group.
"I propose that on October 1st, a lie detector, which he (Uribe) can take to check if I had anything to do with the FARC, but he will also be brought before the same polygraph to prove he has nothing to do with paramilitaries or with drug traffickers, " said Correa.
Colombian terrorist group FARC names new leader
Tue, 11/15/2011 - 16:29 — AmericasForum.com

BOGOTA - Colombian terrorist group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia or FARC, today named a new leader after its former head, Alfonso Cano, was killed by Colombian Armed Forces.
Rodrigo Londono, 52, who is better known as "Timochenko," was named the new head of the FARC on November 5, 2011, the day after Cano was dispatched by the Army in Southwestern Colombia.
Timochenko is one of the longest-serving members of the FARC leadership, an been a member of the FARC secretariat since the 1980s.
The U.S. government has put up a $5 million reward for Timochenko, and Colombia's government has added another $2.6 million for his capture.
FARC terrorist group rejects calls for peace, restates its commitment to 'armed struggle'
Mon, 11/14/2011 - 10:57 — AmericasForum.com
FARC terror group infiltrating Colombian student movement, captured evidence shows
Fri, 11/11/2011 - 22:49 — AmericasForum.com
 Ivan Marquez, supposed heir to the throne of the FARC, is said to be behind the terrorist groups' efforts to infiltrate and radicalize the student movement.
BOGOTA - According to the Colombian daily El Espectador, Colombian police announced that their intelligence services had uncovered evidence that the FARC has plans to influence student protests, particularly in Bogota, and to take advantage of a student protest march planned for this Thursday.
According to official information, this situation is being investigated by the authorities to determine the scope of plans by the Clandestine Communist Party of Colombia, known as the PC3, and of orders by the FARC secretariat to infiltrate universities and its practice of distributing subversive propaganda in schools.
Among the files that were analyzed by authorities - there are several that were signed by Iván Márquez who is assumed to be the most likely successor to the recently killed terrorist leader 'Alfonso Cano'- which talks about a "massive mobilization" of students in Bogota and the call for several leftist organizations to go out and stop traffic in the city.
Alfonso Cano, top FARC leader, killed by Colombian troops
Sat, 11/05/2011 - 12:28 — AmericasForum.com
Basque terrorist group ETA declares end to its practice of violence
Thu, 10/20/2011 - 12:30 — AmericasForum.com

MADRID - The Basque terrorist group ETA announced today that it "has decided to announce the termination of their armed activities," according to a statement posted on the online edition of the Basque newspaper Gara.
Colombia mobilizing to rescue 10 year old girl kidnapped by left-wing terrorist group
Mon, 10/10/2011 - 13:01 — AmericasForum.com
 5000 citizens turned up on Sunday to march in support of the rescue of 10 year old Nohora Munoz, kidnapped on September 29th by one of Colombia's left-wing terrorist groups.
ARAUCA - Colombian Armed Forces reported today that they had killed five members of the ELN terrorist group in a clash on Sunday in Fortul, a city near the Venezuelan border where ELN and FARC terrorists have been known to operate, where they are able to escape into Venezuela when necessary.
President Santos says FARC infiltrating social protests in Colombia
Wed, 09/28/2011 - 15:30 — AmericasForum.com
 FARC graffiti found in Universidad Distrital in Bogota, announcing a strategy to infiltrate schools and universities. ("Because the mountains are our university.")
President Juan Manuel Santos reported Wednesday that FARC terrorists are infiltrating social protests in the country.
During an activation ceremony of the Marine Brigade No. 4 in Tumaco (Nariño), the President also said the government defends the right to protest, but not subversion. "Protests, yes. But this way of doing things we are not going to tolerate, "said Santos.
"We know that the FARC's strategy will be to foment social protests and then infiltrate the protest to produce violence and cause chaos," revealed the President.
He said the Government learned of the intentions of the FARC from intelligence sources, as well as by the information found on computers, and from the testimony of demobilized FARC terrorists.
Santos asked students and social organizations not to allow bad actors to manipulate legitimate organizations, and asked them to work with the authorities.
Uribe says attack on FARC inside Ecuador prompted rescue of Betancourt and American hostages
Wed, 09/28/2011 - 15:02 — AmericasForum.com

Former President of Colombia Alvaro Uribe said in Spain that the bombing of the FARC camp in the Ecuadorian jungle in March 2008 "allowed us to begin the process that ended months later with the liberation of Ingrid Betancourt" and three American contractors.
The attack caused a rift in diplomatic relations, which soon became secondary to the intelligence bonanza taken from FARC computers captured in the incident. The computers showed that Ecuador President Rafael Correa's administration had been collaborating with the FARC, despite official warnings by the Colombian government to help remove them from Ecuadorian territory.
Uribe recalled the two events during his speech at a conference which opened the XII Latin American Meeting on Digital Cities, held through Friday in the Basque city of Bilbao, Spain.
In his speech, Uribe touted the transformation that took place in Colombia between 2002 and 2010, a period during which he was president, in which he implemented a strategy to defeat the FARC terrorist group.
FARC welcomes 'forcibly recruited' children with liquor
Tue, 09/27/2011 - 23:28 — AmericasForum.com
Caracol News has obtained video of the Colombian terrorist group, Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), recruiting children by forcibly taking them from their homes at gunpoint and threatening the lives of their families if they refused.
Once they arrive at the FARC camp, a now deceased FARC terrorist named "Gaitan" can be seen giving the children shots of liquor as they pass by in single file.
Child "impressment" has long been a policy of the FARC, who often exploit poor families in remote areas of the country.
Recently, a FARC commander named "Teofilo" ordered the execution of a 13 year old girl who had been handed over to the terrorist group by her mother in Tolima, Colombia.
REPORT: Chavez officials clear Venezuelan hospital to treat FARC terrorist leader
Thu, 09/22/2011 - 21:48 — AmericasForum.com
 Colombian terrorist leader of the FARC, Alfonso Cano, is reported to be receiving specialized treatment in Venezuela hospital.
CARACAS - On Thursday, three Venezuelan congressmen, Leomagno Flores, Abelardo Díaz and Homero Ruíz, told the newspaper El Universal that the Chavez regime had intervened at the Central Hospital of San Cristobal on behalf of Alfonso Cano, a Colombian leader of the FARC terrorist group.
Libyan rebels execute 10 Colombians thought to be FARC mercenaries
Tue, 09/13/2011 - 23:08 — AmericasForum.com
 Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega (left) and Cuban dictator Fidel Castro (right) embrace Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi in an earlier age.
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