Click here to read
more about press freedom conditions in COLOMBIA
New York, October 11, 2000 -- Guerrilla forces from the National
Liberation Army (ELN) released reporter Jaime Horacio Arango and photographer
Jesús Abad Colorado on October 8, two days after abducting
them at a roadblock in the central department of Antioquia, according
to local reports and CPJ sources.
Arango and Abad Colorado, who work for the Medellín daily El
Colombiano, were sent to cover an ELN roadblock on the highway
linking Bogotá to Medellín, the capital of Antioquia.
They were stopped by ELN guerrillas on October 6 between the towns
of El Santuario and Cocorná, and their white jeep was burned.
The journalists' driver, Fabio Sánchez, was allowed to leave,
and he arrived at Medellín later that night.
The following day, after the ELN announced a 24-hour cease-fire in
the area, a delegation from the non-governmental organization Antioquia
Commission to Facilitate Peace (Comisión Facilitadora de Paz
de Antioquia) met with the guerrillas to secure the release of the
journalists.
On October 8, the ELN released Arango and Abad Colorado into the custody
of the delegation in a rural area in the municipality of Granada,
in eastern Antioquia.
Arango and Abad Colorado were the second group of journalists reporting
on the roadblock on the Bogotá-Medellín highway to be
kidnapped within 48 hours. On October 5, ELN guerrillas released Andrés
Gil, Gustavo González, and Pedro Pinto, members of a TV crew
with channel RCN TV, 13 hours after they had been abducted in a remote
area in Antioquia.
The ELN's apparent motive for the kidnappings was to protest the lack
of coverage in the Colombian media of alleged human rights abuses
by the Colombian Army against civilians in eastern Antioquia. Speaking
to RCN TV on October 6, ELN commander "Timoleón" accused the
Colombian Army of restricting food supplies into the area and carrying
out power cuts.
"We're deeply concerned that the practice of kidnapping journalists
has become routine in Colombia," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper.
"The ELN must refrain from using violence or the threat of violence
to influence coverage or intimidate journalists."
.
END