The Killings in Colombia

Revelations about Colombian politicians' complicity with vicious paramilitary units and drug lords now threaten to sink not only the country's pending free trade agreement with the United States, but also the renewal of funding for America's lavish aid program, Plan Colombia. President Alavaro Uribe may not deserve this fate, but tying trade and aid to respect for human rights is long overdue.

The murder of 11 provincial legislators held hostage by Colombia’s FARC guerrillas is a reminder of that country’s eternal agony. But strange to say, Colombia is in better shape today than it has been for years, thanks largely to President Alvaro Uribe’s leadership.

Of course, as the murders show, Colombia remains a bizarre place, one facing strange and intractable challenges. The FARC guerrillas have held some of their kidnapping victims for many years. Child soldiers still linger in paramilitary groups, and there are compromising video recordings of leading Colombian politicians and drug lords. Perhaps weirdest of all, there are imprisoned guerrillas who refuse to be set free, and a government that insists on liberating them, even against their will.

Uribe was re-elected just over a year ago by a landslide, a tribute to the popularity and effectiveness of his “democratic security” policy of combating both the guerrillas and the country’s generalized violence. Latin America’s oldest standing two-party system was decimated in that election, as the Polo Democrático presidential candidate won more votes than the Liberal Party’s contender, finally giving electoral expression to left-wing forces that had never been able to see more potential for change at the ballot box than by fighting in the mountains.

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