ELECTIONS-COLOMBIA: Paramilitaries Aggressively Campaign for Votes
By Constanza Vieira
BOGOTÁ, Mar 10 (IPS) - A group of sons and daughters of victims of the "dirty war" in Colombia urged voters not to vote in Sunday's legislative elections for candidates on lists that include alleged members of paramilitary militias, their accomplices or their front men.
When parliamentary Deputy Muriel Benito-Revollo was a candidate in the 2002 elections in the province of Sucre on the country's Caribbean coast, local paramilitary chief ‘Rodrigo Cadena' took an active approach in supporting her campaign.
'Cadena', who controlled Benito-Revollo's hometown of San Onofre, among other areas, called the local residents, including the members of the town council, to the central square.
He then placed slips of paper with the names of each town councillor into a bag, and drew out two of the names.
"He said that if Señora Benito-Revollo was not elected, he would kill those two town councillors, as well as a few people from San Onofre who he would choose at random," philosopher Iván Cepeda told IPS.
Iván is the son of Manuel Cepeda, a journalist and senator of the leftist Patriotic Union party, which was destroyed by a campaign of assassination of its leaders, including Manuel, who was murdered in 1994.
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http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=32464~~~~~~~~~~~~~~COLOMBIA: Speaking Out Against Paramilitaries - Before Fleeing Again
By Constanza Vieira
PAJONAL, Colombia, Dec 11 (IPS) - Even his elderly aunt Jacinta, who raised him, is urging him to leave town. This will be the second time Santander Blanco has had to flee for his life. The first time he was forced to leave after refusing to vote for the candidates to the Colombian legislature imposed by the ultra-rightwing paramilitary militias.
That time, he spent three years hiding out in the Caribbean port city of Cartagena in northern Colombia, two hours away by road, and lost everything he had gained in his years of work as a civil servant. But he returned home.
Now he will escape once again to save his life. But this time he decided to speak out before leaving.
He did so before 1,300 people in a public hearing that the Senate human rights committee convened in late November in the municipal capital, San Onofre, in the northwestern Caribbean coastal province of Sucre.
During the hearing, he accused Mayor Jorge Blanco (no relation) of paramilitary ties, in front of the provincial police chiefs. The mayor had won the elections in which he was the only candidate. The regional legislators were arrested in mid-November on orders of the Supreme Court, accused of forming part of paramilitary bands.
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http://wwww.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=35804