New York, March 14, 2000 --- Francisco "Pacho" Santos Calderón,
editor of Colombia's largest daily newspaper, El Tiempo, fled
the country on March 11 after an apparent attempt was made on his
life. According to one of Santos' colleagues, the assassins were hired
by members of the left-wing Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC),
Colombia's largest guerrilla movement.
During peace negotiations between FARC and the Colombian government
held over the weekend of January 29-30, FARC leader Manuel Marulanda
Vélez (also known as "Tirofijo") announced that Colombian journalists
"would pay" for what he saw as anti- FARC bias.
On March 8, as Santos was on his way to eat in a restaurant that he
frequented regularly, his security guards noticed that a number of
vehicles that had been trailing the journalist for the last month
were parked outside. Santos changed his plans, foiling an apparent
assassination attempt.
Santos noticed he was being followed about a month prior to the attack,
and contacted authorities at that time, according to CPJ's sources
in Colombia. Less than a week before the March 8 incident, police
officers captured an individual who revealed that members of the FARC's
Front 22 had hired a number of "sicarios" (paid assassins) to kill
the journalist.
Santos has publicly denounced the kidnapping of journalists, a common
practice among Colombian guerrilla factions seeking money or publicity.
"Today the entire Colombian press is held hostage," wrote Santos in
an October 31, 1999 El Tiempo editorial, accusing FARC and
other violence-prone Colombian political organizations of using fascist
methods to stifle independent journalism.
In addition to his role as editor of El Tiempo, Santos is the
founder and director of the only non-governmental organization devoted
to ending kidnapping, La Fundación País Libre (Foundation
for a Free Country). Some 230 people were kidnapped in Colombia in
1999, according to El Tiempo's records. Santos is also the
co-director of ¡No Más! (No More), an organization composed
of some 200 private, non-partisan groups dedicated to ending the violence
that has racked Colombia for the last forty years.
Santos himself was kidnapped in 1990 by Pablo Escobar, the leader
of the Medellín drug cartel. Along with ten others, he was
held for about eight months in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt
to extort a promise from then president César Gaviria that
he would not extradite drug traffickers to the United States.
Santos' exile follows the January 22 kidnapping of Guillermo "La Chiva"
("The Scoop") Cortés, a 73-year-old journalist who was abducted
from his home in Choachí, outside of Bogotá. He is believed
to be in the hands of the FARC. Another prominent journalist and television
personality, Fernando González Pacheco, was forced to leave
the country the week before Santos, also due to FARC threats. Pacheco
hosts the nationally acclaimed program "Charlas con Pacheco" ("Chats
with Pacheco"), which features interviews with notable political leaders
and celebrities.
Investigations into the Cortés case suggest that the FARC members
who kidnapped Cortés were actually searching for Pacheco, according
to CPJ's sources. Pacheco owns a house next door to Cortés'
residence in Choachí, but happened to be in Bogotá at
the time of the attack.
END