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Colombia ReportsUS renews investigations of extradited ex-paramilitaries
Monday, 18 April 2011 18:21
Marguerite Cawley
http://colombiareports.com.nyud.net:8090/pics/2011/04/mancuso_us.jpgU.S. authorities have moved forward a series of 200 proceedings in investigations into over a dozen ex-paramilitary leaders detained in the U.S. since 2008, Colombian media reported Monday.
After meeting Monday with her U.S. equivalent, Eric Holder, in Washington D.C, Colombia's Prosecutor General Viviane Morales said that she was informed that U.S. proceedings against the extraditees have been renewed, after a pause last year that coincided with the change in Colombia's administration.
The AUC ex-paramilitaries were extradited to the U.S. in May 2008 by the administration of then-President Alvaro Uribe to face drug trafficking charges.
Among those extradited are Diego Murillo alias "Don Berna," Salvatore Mancuso and Rodrigo Tovar Pupo alias "Jorge 40," accused along with drug trafficking charges of being responsible for tens of thousands crimes against humanity, including assassinations, rape, forced disappearance and forced displacement.
Read more:
http://colombiareports.com/colombia-news/news/15682-us-authorities-renew-investigations-of-14-ex-paramilitaries.html
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_HyyDHyAwI6k/S46u5DzrocI/AAAAAAAAIQI/xWwd_bAV56s/s400/salvatore+mancuso.jpg

http://www.adn.es.nyud.net:8090/clipping/ADNIMA20080513_2132/4.jpgColombian militia leader confesses to massacres
Sibylla Brodzinsky in Medellín The Guardian, Thursday 18 January 2007
A senior commander of Colombia's rightwing militias has admitted taking part in some of the country's most grisly crimes in the first of what could become a flood of confessions from demobilised paramilitary leaders.
Salvatore Mancuso told a prosecutor in Medellín this week that he was responsible for hundreds of kidnappings, murders and massacres during his 15-year career in the death squads that spread terror throughout Colombia in the name of fighting leftist rebels.
In two days of testimony, Mancuso admitted to directly participating in or ordering the murder of hundreds of people, among them mayors, union leaders and peasants. With presentations projected from his laptop computer, Mancuso listed in chronological order the massacres at El Aro, Mápiripan, El Salado and other towns, all of which he called "anti-subversive operations". He also named the victims.
Some relatives of the dead heard the confessions. When Miryam Areiza heard Mancuso read her father's name as he recounted the 1997 massacre at El Aro, where he and 14 others were tortured and killed, she said she felt ill. "Where does he get off saying my father was a guerrilla? My father was a peasant, tending to his farm. He was tortured and killed and Mancuso was responsible," she said outside the special room for victims and their families to watch the closed proceedings.
More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/jan/18/colombia.sibyllabrodzinsky