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Report: Colombian army head collaborated with 'terrorist' paramilitaries

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The so-called Pact of Ralito was signed in 2001 by paramilitaries and elected officials, including former governors and congressmen, from the Caribbean coast. One of the signatories, pro-government Sen. Miguel de la Espriella, revealed its existence during a November newspaper interview.

The curtly worded covenant, named for the northern town of Santa Fe de Ralito near the ranch where it was signed, contains a list of innocuous-sounding goals like "rebuilding the motherland" on the basis of respect for property rights, national independence and the Constitution.

But the fact its existence was kept secret for so long has led many Colombians to conclude that the true aim of the pact was to pledge loyalty to the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, a paramilitary umbrella group, and their scheme to take over the country's institutions ahead of their eventual demobilization.

Nine legislators and Jorge Noguera, the former head of Colombia's domestic intelligence agency under Uribe, have already been arrested for their role in the pact, though JURIST reports that Mr. Noguera was released on a technicality Friday. A Colombian appellate judge found that Noguera was "'illegally and unconstitutionally ... deprived of his freedom' because chief prosecutor Mario Iguaran had not personally issued an arrest request."

The Christian Science Monitor notes that right-wing paramilitaries remain in operation in Colombia, though they were supposedly demobilized in agreements forged by Uribe's government.

The chief of Colombia's paramilitary reintegration program, Frank Pearl, said last month that the government had "lost track" of 4,731 demobilized fighters. Former paramilitary chief Salvatore Mancuso stated last month that groups such as Black Eagles were rearming, and now number up to 5,000.

The same month, the Organization of American States Mission to Support the Peace Process (MAPP-OEA) reported that 22 new illegal armed groups were active in 10 departments across the country.

Nowhere is the apparent rise of a "new generation" of paramilitaries on display more than in Barrancabermeja. The city has been rocked by 17 execution-style shootings so far this year, as well as three grenade attacks, one of which killed a young secretary at a real estate agency.

The Monitor reports that the Barrancabermeja police department "blames the fresh violence on criminal groups fighting over their stake in the illegal drug trade, rather than politically motivated paramilitary violence."

But [Father EliƩcer Soto, the director of the human rights program of the Catholic diocese of Barrancabermeja] refutes this. "[The right-wing paramilitary group United Self-defense Forces of Colombia] had to disarm a strong part of their military structure so they could reintegrate their chiefs into civilian life," he says "but there are thousands of paramilitaries active around Colombia, and the massacres are continuing." He estimates that 40 to 50 percent of paramilitaries are still active. But he warns that the problem they represent to critics of "para-political" corruption is the same as before demobilization, Now, he says, it's more terrifying because it's clandestine. So, he says, "the effects on the people are the same."

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