|
COLOMBIA: Hostages’ Release,
Seen from the Other Side
January 11, 2008 - (IPS) While the
international spotlight was shined on two women hostages released
by Colombia’s FARC guerrillas, IPS interviewed by telephone
a woman who reflects the other side of the hostage crisis.
These are the invisible women thrown
into prison on charges of "rebellion", many of them merely
because they live in rebel-controlled areas. A significant proportion
of them are civilians who are eventually acquitted and released
- but not before they spend up to four years in jail.
Unlike the cases of former politicians Clara Rojas and Consuelo
González, who were freed Thursday by the FARC (Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia) amid great fanfare, these women’s
stories are seldom if ever told.
In the El Buen Pastor women’s prison in Bogotá there
are 63 prisoners serving time for "rebellion", but only
25 or 30 of them actually belong to the FARC, a peasant insurgency
that rose up in arms in 1964.
"There are many people who are arrested for ‘rebellion’,
but who have no real ties to the movement. They are treated as criminals
because they live in an area under guerrilla influence, and everyone
there is seen as a FARC collaborator," said E., a woman under
30 who is doing time in El Buen Pastor.
(The FARC control an estimated 40 percent of the national territory,
mainly in rural, sparsely populated areas.)
E. asked IPS not to publish her personal details, because she preferred
to speak "in the name of several of us." The interview
took place simultaneously with the release of Rojas and González.
"There are thousands of ‘Emmanuels’ in Colombia,"
said E, referring to the son Rojas gave birth to in captivity in
the jungle, who was separated from his mother when he was around
eight months old.
The children of the inmates of El Buen Pastor can live with their
mothers until they turn three, when they are turned over to other
family members or to the Colombian Family Welfare Institute (ICBF)
- the institution that took Emmanuel into custody when he was found
to have serious health problems.
IPS: How do you see this hostage release, from prison?
E: Obviously what is happening makes us really happy, because these
two women are returning to their families. But they are only two
people in a conflict in which many people are suffering.
People’s hearts need to open up, so that the two sides sit
down, in whatever conditions are established, to reach the goal
of a humanitarian exchange (of FARC hostages for imprisoned guerrillas).
And also, what is really being sought is to reach the possibility
of a solution to Colombia’s social and armed conflict. Many
of us are here because we believe in a different country, and that
certain sacrifices have to be made. We are convinced that there
will be a new Colombia, and that we will be able to live in a country
with social justice.
IPS: The hostage release was a unilateral gesture by the FARC. Is
it a step forward, towards negotiations?
E: It's a window of opportunity for a humanitarian swap to begin
to be arranged, a gesture that shows that it is possible to reach
an agreement between the two sides. As political prisoners, what
we hope for is that humanitarian considerations take precedence
in the conflict.
It is also a sign that there is willingness and interest on the
part of the FARC. But it is the conditions in the armed conflict
that are keeping things from being done the way they should be.
What we in prison are saying is the same thing expressed by the
FARC leadership: a (demilitarised) safe haven is needed, both for
the safety of the hostages to be released and of the people who
will be negotiating.
IPS: Do the FARC inmates in your prison have children?
E: They are all mothers, except for three or four. In total, they
number around 30.
IPS: How many are living with their mothers in the prison?
E: There are about 30 or 40 kids in this prison. In this wing (of
women imprisoned for war-related crimes), there are six. Most of
them are the children of women serving time for "rebellion".
They are babies and toddlers up to the age of three. When they turn
three, they are separated from their mothers. And if there is no
one to take them in, they go to the ICBF.
IPS: Can they still see their mothers?
E: The ICBF has an agreement with the prison, so that the kids can
be brought once a month to visit their mothers. There are thousands
of "Emmanuels" in Colombia. One of them, fortunately,
will see his mother again. There are thousands of others who can't.
IPS: International humanitarian law (IHL) distinguishes between
civilians and combatants. Hostage-taking is prohibited by IHL, while
exchanges of combatants have occurred since war was first invented.
A civilian is not the same thing as someone who has actively committed
themself to war.
E: That’s true. But look: here in El Buen Pastor, most of
the women are civilians who live in guerrilla-controlled areas,
and who after spending two years in jail are simply told: "go
home."
Of 100 women, at least 50 have nothing to do with (the war). Last
week, three women were released after spending a year and a half
in jail. They were told "go home, what a pity, we made a mistake."
Others are sentenced for 40 to 60 years. There are people here who
have accumulated sentences in several cases.
The rest are teachers, trade unionists, "community mothers"
(women who run government child care centres in their homes), or
small farmers, who have to spend at least a year and a half here,
no matter how well things go for them in court. Very few actually
end up being convicted. The prosecutions drag on for up to four
years. Last year, two women who were released had spent four years
behind bars, and were acquitted in the end.
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/print.asp?idnews=40756
|