Sunday, January 19, 2025

80 killed, thousands displaced in Colombian guerrilla violence

AFP
Sun 19 January 2025 


A police officer unloads humanitarian aid for displaced people in Tibu, Colombia (Schneyder Mendoza) (Schneyder Mendoza/AFP/AFP)


A fresh outbreak of guerrilla violence amid a faltering peace process in Colombia has left more than 80 people dead, including civilians, and displaced thousands in just four days, officials reported Sunday.

As residents fled for their lives, the army deployed some 5,000 troops to the cocaine-growing Catatumbo region at the center of a fast-escalating territorial war.

The National Liberation Army (ELN) armed group, officials said, launched an assault in Catatumbo last Thursday on a rival formation comprised of ex-members of the now-defunct FARC guerrilla force who kept fighting after it disarmed in 2017.

Civilians found themselves caught in the middle, and by Sunday, it was estimated that "more than 80 people have lost their lives," according to governor William Villamizar of the Norte de Santander department.

Terrified residents carrying backpacks and belongings on overladen motorcycles, boats, or crammed onto the backs of open trucks, fled the region over the weekend.

Hundreds found refuge in the town of Tibu, where several shelters were set up, while others crossed the border to Venezuela -- for some a return to a country from where they had fled economic and political upheaval.

Venezuela announced the launch of "a special operation to assist the civilian population displaced from Colombia," -- hundreds of families according to the government in Caracas.

- House to house -

Villamizar said about two dozen people had been injured and some 5,000 displaced in the violence, and described the resulting humanitarian situation as "alarming."

He urged the fighters to create humanitarian corridors by which civilians could safely escape.

The latest death toll in the restive, mountainous region was 20 more than the number reported by authorities Saturday, which had included seven ex-FARC combatants.

The Ombudsman's Office, a rights watchdog, cited reports of ELN rebels going from "house to house," killing people suspected of ties to the FARC dissidents.

It warned that "peace signatories, social leaders and their families, and even children, face a special risk of being kidnapped or killed" and said many had fled for the mountains.

Army commander Luis Emilio Cardozo said guerrilla fighters took civilians from their homes and "killed them."

He added the army was offering people refuge on military bases, and said food was being delivered to conflict areas.

Classes were suspended in the affected region and schools converted into shelters, authorities said, as Colombian Defense Minister Ivan Velasquez arrived in the city of Cucuta some 60 miles (100 kilometers) from Tibu to oversee a military offensive against the guerrillas.

- 'War crimes' -

The Marxist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) -- once the largest guerrilla force in the Western Hemisphere -- disarmed under a 2016 peace deal reached after more than half a century of war.

But the pact failed to extinguish the violence involving leftist guerrillas -- including the ELN and FARC holdouts -- rightwing paramilitaries and drug cartels over resources and trafficking routes in some regions of the country.

The ELN has in recent days also clashed with the Gulf Clan, the largest drug cartel in the world's biggest cocaine producer, leaving at least nine dead in a different part of northern Colombia.

The violence prompted President Gustavo Petro on Friday to call off negotiations initiated with the ELN in his pursuit of "total peace."

With a force of about 5,800 combatants, the ELN is one of the biggest armed groups still active in Colombia. It has taken part in failed peace negotiations with Colombia's last five governments.

While professing to be driven by leftist, nationalist ideology, the ELN is deeply involved in the drug trade and has become one of the region's most powerful organized crime groups.

Talks with the ELN broke down for several months last year after the group launched a deadly attack on a military base.

Following the latest round of fighting, Petro said the ELN "shows no willingness to make peace" in a post on X that also accused the group of committing "war crimes."

sp/lv/mlr/bfm


Colombia halts peace talks with ELN rebels and accuses them of war crimes in northeastern region

Associated Press
Updated Fri 17 January 2025 


FILE - Colombian government representative Vera Grabe, left, and Colombian commander of the National Liberation Army guerrilla group (ELN) Pablo Beltran exchange their signed ceasefire extension agreement in Havana, Cuba, Feb. 6, 2024. Behind are Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, left, and an unidentified Cuban official. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File)

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombia on Friday suspended peace talks with the National Liberation Army, or ELN, for a second time in less than a year after blaming the rebel group for recent violence in a northeastern region.

"The dialogue process with this group is suspended, the ELN has no will for peace,” President Gustavo Petro said in a post on his X account.

The ELN has been fighting ex-rebels of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia guerrilla group, or FARC, in a region known as Catatumbo, close to the border between Colombia and Venezuela.

Recently, the ELN has been spreading into rural areas abandoned by the FARC, which agreed a peace deal with the government in 2016.


On Thursday, a former FARC leader accused the ELN of killing at least four demobilized members of the group. Authorities have said that they are investigating other deaths.

“What the ELN has committed in Catatumbo are war crimes," said Petro, without giving more details.

The government suspended peace talks with the ELN last September after blaming it for the deaths of two soldiers.

Peace negotiations with the ELN began in November 2022 after Petro took power as the first leftist president and he also launched talks with other armed groups under a policy known as total peace.

The ELN, which was founded in the 1960s by union leaders and university students inspired by the Cuban Revolution, has an estimated 6,000 fighters in Colombia and Venezuela and finances itself through drug trafficking and illegal gold mines.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america




Fact Check: Biden Issued the Most Individual Acts of Clemency, But Jimmy Carter Pardoned More People


Jack Izzo
Sat, January 18, 2025 

Getty Images


Claim:

U.S. President Joe Biden issued more pardons than any other American president.

Rating:

Rating: Mixture

What's True:

On Jan. 17, 2025, Biden announced he would commute the sentences of about 2,500 people serving time for nonviolent drug offenses. That act made Biden the president who issued the most individual acts of clemency in a single term.



What's False:

However, Biden did not pardon the most people in a presidential term. Jimmy Carter issued an executive order on his first day in office pardoning 209,517 men who evaded the Vietnam draft.

At the very end of his presidency, in a very short time span, U.S. President Joe Biden issued two of the largest acts of clemency in modern American history: He pardoned 39 and commuted almost 1,500 sentences on Dec. 13, 2024, and commuted almost 2,500 more sentences on Jan. 17, 2025. The second act made him the U.S. president who issued the most individual acts of clemency before leaving office.

Biden's action in December 2024, which followed shortly after he issued a pardon to his son Hunter, sparked discussion online over the power of the presidential pardon, and several conservative pundits on social media criticized Biden's actions as an overreach and claimed he had pardoned more people than any other president in American history. That rumor was also shared at the time by tech billionaire Elon Musk, the owner of the social media platform X.



(X account @ElonMusk)

However, the claim is not entirely true, because of the language of the presidential pardon.

There are four key words to understanding the power: clemency, commutation, reprieve and pardon. Clemency refers to any action that a president takes to reduce or eliminate the legal penalties for a crime, and a pardon, commutation and reprieve are all forms of clemency. According to the White House Historical Association, a reprieve delays a sentence or punishment, a commutation reduces a sentence or punishment and a pardon fully releases a person from punishment and restores all civil liberties.


Another element is an amnesty, which is similar to a pardon but applies to a whole class of individuals.

Before his second large act of clemency on Jan. 17, Biden had not issued the most individual acts of clemency of any president. As such, we previously rated this claim false (archived).

According to the Department of Justice's Office of the Pardon Attorney, Biden had issued pardons for 65 people and had commuted the sentences of 1,671 more as of Dec. 23, 2024. (A full list of those pardons is available elsewhere on OPA's website). His most recent action added nearly 2,500 more acts of clemency to his total, placing Biden far ahead of the previous record, Harry Truman's 2,044 acts.

However, because many of Biden's acts of clemency were sentence commutations, not pardons, it is incorrect to say Biden had issued more pardons than any U.S. president in history. Using the OPA statistics, most presidents have used the power more than Biden. While Biden issued 65 individual pardons, Donald Trump issued 144 during his four years in office and Barack Obama issued 212 across eight years.

However, this is still not the full story, because the figure of 65 does not include any blanket pardons, acts that pardon multiple people at once. In 2022 and 2023, Biden issued two blanket pardons addressing people convicted on certain marijuana charges. According to data from the U.S. Sentencing Commission, those pardons affected 6,577 people. Even with those blanket pardons, however, Biden had not pardoned 8,000 Americans.

Furthermore, even if Biden had pardoned 8,000 people, it would still not be the most individuals pardoned by a U.S. president. On his first day in office, President Jimmy Carter pardoned everyone who evaded the Vietnam War draft, albeit with some exemptions — 209,517 men were officially charged, according to Politico. Furthermore, President Andrew Johnson issued blanket pardons for most Confederate soldiers after the end of the Civil War (those acts of clemency did require an oath of allegiance, so some may wish not to count this).


Sources:

"ArtII.S2.C1.3.1 Overview of Pardon Power." Constitution Annotated, https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artII-S2-C1-3-1/ALDE_00013316/.

"Biden Commutes Roughly 1,500 Sentences and Pardons 39 People in Biggest Single-Day Act of Clemency." AP News, 12 Dec. 2024, https://apnews.com/article/biden-pardons-clemency-4432002d67334e6716c2776fd73f3cc8.

"Biden Pardons Thousands Convicted of Marijuana Charges on Federal Lands and in Washington." AP News, 22 Dec. 2023, https://apnews.com/article/biden-marijuana-pardons-clemency-02abde991a05ff7dfa29bfc3c74e9d64.


"Biden Pardons Thousands for 'simple Possession' of Marijuana." AP News, 7 Oct. 2022, https://apnews.com/article/biden-marijuana-government-and-politics-2d5e3d9e2cfbbbe3ee114536738894a8.

Confederate States of America | History, President, Map, Facts, & Flag | Britannica. 21 Nov. 2024, https://www.britannica.com/topic/Confederate-States-of-America.

Danner, Chas. "Everyone Biden Has Granted Presidential Pardons and Commutations." Intelligencer, 15 Dec. 2024, https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/joe-biden-clemency-list-pardons-commutations.html.

[December 25, 1868.- Granting Full Pardon and Amnesty to All Persons Engaged in the Late Rebellion.] By the President of the United States of America. A Proclamation ... Done at the City of Washington, the Twenty-Fifth Day of December, in the Ye | Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/resource/rbpe.23602600/. Accessed 18 Dec. 2024.

Glass, Andrew. "President Carter Pardons Draft Dodgers , Jan. 21, 1977." Politico, 21 Jan. 2018, https://www.politico.com/story/2018/01/21/president-carter-pardons-draft-dodgers-jan-21-1977-346493.

"Marijuana Pardons and Expungements: By the Numbers." NORML, https://norml.org/marijuana/fact-sheets/marijuana-pardons-and-expungements-by-the-numbers/. Accessed 18 Dec. 2024.

Number of Federal Offenders Convicted Only of 21 U.S.C. § 844 Involving Marijuana Fiscal Years 1992 – 2021. U.S. Sentencing Commission, https://www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/news/press-releases-and-news-advisories/news-advisories/20221012_Updated-News-Advisory-Data-Analysis.pdf.

Office of the Pardon Attorney | Clemency Statistics. 12 Jan. 2015, https://www.justice.gov/pardon/clemency-statistics.

Office of the Pardon Attorney | Pardons Granted by President Joseph Biden (2021-Present). 22 Jan. 2021, https://www.justice.gov/pardon/pardons-granted-president-joseph-biden-2021-present.

Office of the Pardon Attorney | Presidential Proclamation on Marijuana Possession, Attempted Possession, and Use. 6 Oct. 2022, https://www.justice.gov/pardon/presidential-proclamation-marijuana-possession.

Office of the Pardon Attorney | Proclamation 4483: Granting Pardon for Violations of the Selective Service Act. 12 Jan. 2015, https://www.justice.gov/pardon/proclamation-4483-granting-pardon-violations-selective-service-act.

"PRESIDENT ANDREW JOHNSON PARDONS CONFEDERATE JOHN C. SHELTON, 1866." Library of Virginia, https://edu.lva.virginia.gov/dbva/items/show/149#:~:text=One%20of%20the%20most%20controversial,ended%20on%20April%209%2C%201865.

Stilwell, Blake. "Pardoning Vietnam War Draft Dodgers Was a No-Win Situation for Jimmy Carter." Military.Com, 23 Feb. 2023, https://www.military.com/history/pardoning-vietnam-war-draft-dodgers-was-no-win-situation-jimmy-carter.html.

"The History of the Pardon Power." WHHA (En-US), https://www.whitehousehistory.org/the-history-of-the-pardon-power. Accessed 18 Dec. 2024.