Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Top Farc Rebel Leader Alfonso Cano Killed In Colombia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Top Farc Rebel Leader Alfonso Cano Killed In Colombia

    TOP FARC REBEL LEADER ALFONSO CANO KILLED IN COLOMBIA

    ARMENPRESS
    13:25, 5 November, 2011

    The leader of Colombia's left wing Farc rebel group, Alfonso Cano,
    has been killed in a military raid, President Juan Manuel Santos
    has confirmed.

    He called it the most devastating blow to the group in its decades-long
    insurgency and urged it to disband.

    Defence Minister Juan Carlos Pinzon said Cano was killed in an
    operation in mountains in Colombia's south-west.

    Security forces have killed a number of Farc commanders and arrested
    many others in recent years.

    Giving details of the operation, Mr Pinzon said government forces
    first bombed a Farc jungle camp in Cauca state.

    Troops were then lowered from helicopters to search the area and killed
    Cano and several other Farc (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia)
    members in a gun battle.

    Pictures of the dead leader, with his trademark bushy beard shaved off,
    were broadcast on Colombian television.

    "It is the most devastating blow that this group has suffered in its
    history," President Santos said in a televised address.

    "I want to send a message to each and every member of that
    organization: demobilise... or otherwise you will end up in a prison
    or in a tomb. We will achieve peace."

    Cano, 63, was reportedly tracked down to the jungle camp with the
    aid of telephone intercepts.

    Colombia had offered a reward of nearly $4m (£2.5m) for information
    leading to his capture.

    Analysts say Cano's death deals a further blow to the rebel group's
    ability to co-ordinate attacks on security forces and other targets.

    The Marxist-inspired Farc has already been weakened by a military
    offensive which began 10 years ago.

    Mr Cano, a former academic from Bogota, became the Farc's leader in
    2008 after his predecessor, Manuel Marulanda died of a heart attack.

    His real name was Guillermo Leon Saenz.

    In July, he narrowly escaped a raid on his camp, Colombian officials
    said.

    In September 2010, Mono Jojoy, another top Farc commander, was killed
    in a bombing raid.

    The Colombian army also said earlier this year that it had killed Mr
    Cano's head of security, Alirio Rojas Bocanegra.

    The military has been able to expand its operations against the rebels
    with the help of the US, which has provided billions of dollars in
    funding, training and intelligence-sharing.

    However, the Farc - the oldest and largest among Colombia's left-wing
    rebel groups - retains the ability to mount hit-and-run attacks,
    partly owing to cash raised through its involvement in the illegal
    drugs trade and partly thanks to the country's thick jungles.

    The Farc is on US and European lists of terrorist organisations.

    Colombia's civil conflict has lasted more than four decades, drawing
    in left-wing rebels and right-wing paramilitaries.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X