
IPO is an organization of international accompaniment and communication working in solidarity with organizations that practice nonviolent resistance.
18.08.10: Colombian court strikes down U.S. defense agreement
5.08.10: NGO: ’Alarming’ link between US aid and ’false positives’
10.06.10: Colombia: A country of rising inequality
8.06.10: Statement by IPO regarding the Israeli Army's boarding of the Gaza-bound humanitarian aid ships
12.05.10: We want real changes in US-Colombia policy: WOLA
30.04.10: European Parliament seeks clarification for the DAS espionage
1.10.09: Ressisting US military Bases: Colombia in Context
10.07.08: The Real Operation to "Rescue" Ingrid Betancourt and US Mercenaries
7.07.08: Colombia Hostage Rescue Endangers Lives of Journalists and Aid Workers
4.06.08: Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International Slam UK Military Aid to Colombia
15.04.12: Gallery of Remembrance Assaulted, Censored, and Threatened on April 9 in Villavicencio, Meta
18.02.12: Civilian dwellings in Agualinda bombed by the Army’s 4th Division
19.12.11: More Human Rights Violations in Huila
26.11.11: ASOCBAC Leader Fredy Jimenez Assassinated in Taraza
12.11.11: Member of CPDH held captive for 40 days
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7.07.08
Source: US Military Special-Ops Team, and Not the Colombian Army, Carried Out Hostage Rescue in Colombia
Months in the Planning, the Operation Included US Special Forces Posing as Members of a “French Humanitarian Group”
By Bill Conroy
Special to The Narco News Bulletin
July 3, 2008
A U.S. military special-operations unit carried out the recent rescue of three Defense Department contractors being held by the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), according to a source who has first-hand knowledge of the operation.
The U.S. military contractors – Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell – had been held captive by the FARC ever since their surveillance plane was shot down in February 2003 over the Colombian jungles. Also rescued in the mission were 11 Colombian military and police officers as well as former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt – who also is a French citizen.
The source of information for this report asked not to be identified, though Narco News has not been led astray by this source in the past.