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mosfeld
11th September 2010, 14:40
Colombian rebels kill 8 police in mortar attack
By CESAR GARCIA (AP) – 15 hours ago

BOGOTA, Colombia — Leftist rebels firing homemade mortars killed at least eight police officers and wounded four in a pre-dawn attack Friday on a police barracks near the country's border with Ecuador, the defense minister said.

Two police officers were missing after the attack by guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, on a barracks housing 80 police in the town of San Miguel, said the minister, Rodrigo Rivera.

FARC rebels have for years used Ecuador as a refuge, crossing the San Miguel river to attack Colombian forces. It was not known whether that was the case Friday, but Rivera immediately made contact with Ecuadorean officials to discuss the possibility. A bridge spanning the river is about a mile from the attacked barracks.

The FARC and Colombia's No. 2 rebel group, the ELN, have stepped up attacks on security forces since President Juan Manuel Santos took office Aug. 7. At least 28 police officers and soldiers have been killed, 17 in the past week.

Santos was defense minister under his predecessor, Alvaro Uribe, who weakened the rebels with billions in U.S. military aid. But many analysts believe the rebels cannot be defeated by arms alone.

A cross-border raid into Ecuador by Colombia's military in March 2008 killed a top FARC commander and 25 others, prompting Ecuador to break off diplomatic relations. Ties are only now being fully restored.

(This version CORRECTS that 80 police officers were at barracks rather than 80 rebels attacked post; number of attackers unknown.)

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jXVa7QL2Tp_OSxo0__wQDPuq0_ZQD9I5B5TO0

mosfeld
11th September 2010, 14:48
Colombian reporter denies links to leftist rebels

CARACAS, Venezuela — A Colombian reporter accused of conspiring with leftist rebels denied the allegations Friday, saying his contacts with the guerrillas were purely for his journalistic work.

Reporter William Parra, from Colombia, gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, Sept. 10, 2010. Parra, who has been accused of conspiring with leftist rebels, denied the allegations saying his contacts with the guerrillas were purely for his journalistic work. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Reporter William Parra, from Colombia, gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, Sept. 10, 2010. Parra, who has been accused of conspiring with leftist rebels, denied the allegations saying his contacts with the guerrillas were purely for his journalistic work. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)
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William Parra said in an interview with The Associated Press in Venezuela, where he lives, that police and military in his home country have viewed him as an enemy ever since he refused to lead them to a camp where he interviewed a leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

"I don't have anything to hide. My closeness to the guerrillas was exclusively out of journalistic interest," Parra told the AP. "I never passed a line beyond that."

A Colombian court issued a warrant for Parra's arrest Monday. Prosecutors have accused him of financing terrorist activities and sedition. But on Friday, prosecutor Ricardo Bejarano said he was removed from the case.

Parra called that a positive step.

"It shows they are in fact recognizing all of the highhandedness," he said.

He said Colombian authorities should also allow him access to any evidence they believe they have against him related to contacts with the FARC.

Bejarano has said prosecutors have e-mails that Parra exchanged with Raul Reyes, a rebel commander killed in 2008, and that in one, Reyes asks Parra to buy missiles in the Middle East.

Parra denied meeting with anyone to discuss weapons for the FARC. "When they show me that evidence, I'm willing to go to jail," he said.

Parra was press secretary for then-Colombian President Ernesto Samper in the 1990s and has recently worked with Telesur, the regional TV network backed by Venezuela's leftist government. He said he has worked independently since leaving Telesur in 2008.

Parra has lived for several years in Venezuela, where he obtained refugee status saying he faced political persecution in Colombia.