The Paramilitary Effect
Salvatore Mancuso and his right-wing militiamen
already reign supreme in parts of the Colombian countryside. Now
they are gaining power in the political arena
By
Joseph Contreras- NEWSWEEK INTERNATIONAL
April 8, 2002 issue
Salvatore Mancuso is a wanted man. The 37-year-old
military chief of Colombias outlawed right-wing militias
was convicted in absentia last month of organizing armed vigilante
groups and sentenced to 11 years in prison on charges arising
from the November 1997 murder of a small-town mayor. But in the
humid lowlands of northwestern Colombia, where the countrys
ruthless paramilitary forces reign supreme, Mancuso is an untouchable
warlord whom no one dares cross. That crude fact of life seems
to apply to the government of lame-duck President Andres Pastrana
as welldespite two outstanding warrants for his arrest.
We have replaced the state in various areas, Mancuso
told NEWSWEEK in an exclusive interview at a paramilitary camp
two weeks ago. We have had to arm and defend ourselves,
we build schools and health clinicsall because the state
has failed to fulfill its constitutional duties.
MANCUSO AND HIS estimated 8,000 comrades
in arms have indeed become a state within a state in vast tracts
of the Colombian countryside. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency
says the militias fund their operations with cocaine-smuggling
profits, an allegation Mancuso now disputes. No one denies that
the self-styled United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) have
acquired a military capability in recent years that puts them
on a par with the countrys more numerous and longer established
communist guerrilla armies. As Colombians from nearly all walks
of life swing sharply to the right in outrage over the summary
executions and kidnapping practices of the nominally Marxist Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the six right-wing militias grouped
under the AUCs umbrella banner have never wielded more power
at home. They have grown at such a rapid rate that they
are now fast approaching the FARC, says counterinsurgency
expert Thomas Marks of the Hawaii-based Academy of the Pacific.
The FARC has adopted the paramilitaries as their main enemy
instead of the Colombian armed forces.
There is mounting evidence that the right-wing
militias power is no longer confined exclusively to the
battlefield. Colombia held congressional elections in mid-March
against the backdrop of hard-line presidential candidate Alvaro
Uribe Velezs meteoric rise in opinion polls. Dozens of pro-Uribe
candidates won seats in both houses of the national legislature,
and Mancuso issued an official communique hailing the results
that, by his reckoning, delivered victory to more than one third
of the paramilitary forces preferred candidates.
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