Dubai Telegraph - 'Sowing peace'? Colombia program for war criminals stokes debate

EUR -
AED 4.31455
AFN 75.17582
ALL 95.497748
AMD 434.609215
ANG 2.102431
AOA 1078.299107
ARS 1629.799413
AUD 1.621782
AWG 2.115782
AZN 1.997833
BAM 1.949267
BBD 2.366459
BDT 144.435342
BGN 1.959384
BHD 0.443243
BIF 3494.490103
BMD 1.174619
BND 1.487509
BOB 8.118757
BRL 5.802377
BSD 1.174957
BTN 111.168968
BWP 15.722243
BYN 3.318066
BYR 23022.523033
BZD 2.363071
CAD 1.601181
CDF 2720.416217
CHF 0.914334
CLF 0.026757
CLP 1053.08021
CNY 8.00062
CNH 8.003075
COP 4377.638785
CRC 536.101092
CUC 1.174619
CUP 31.127391
CVE 110.355846
CZK 24.315545
DJF 208.753027
DKK 7.472242
DOP 69.948993
DZD 155.426683
EGP 61.927887
ERN 17.619278
ETB 184.530583
FJD 2.565308
FKP 0.86525
GBP 0.864046
GEL 3.147258
GGP 0.86525
GHS 13.214287
GIP 0.86525
GMD 86.334925
GNF 10313.150391
GTQ 8.968904
GYD 245.775292
HKD 9.203725
HNL 31.279893
HRK 7.533412
HTG 153.749219
HUF 358.757838
IDR 20341.69118
ILS 3.410628
IMP 0.86525
INR 111.038683
IQD 1538.750264
IRR 1542274.119942
ISK 143.785121
JEP 0.86525
JMD 185.131149
JOD 0.832823
JPY 183.603453
KES 151.737226
KGS 102.685737
KHR 4714.328613
KMF 492.164793
KPW 1057.160776
KRW 1697.429557
KWD 0.361712
KYD 0.979115
KZT 544.084304
LAK 25806.369524
LBP 104988.695268
LKR 376.137855
LRD 215.630544
LSL 19.422288
LTL 3.468343
LVL 0.710515
LYD 7.447119
MAD 10.804726
MDL 20.197227
MGA 4886.413132
MKD 61.626822
MMK 2466.169432
MNT 4204.722635
MOP 9.48288
MRU 46.860325
MUR 54.960077
MVR 18.153718
MWK 2046.185399
MXN 20.262636
MYR 4.610383
MZN 75.069563
NAD 19.422339
NGN 1600.253173
NIO 43.13183
NOK 10.911504
NPR 177.87015
NZD 1.969841
OMR 0.451696
PAB 1.174957
PEN 4.067112
PGK 5.095789
PHP 71.404705
PKR 327.454346
PLN 4.232021
PYG 7190.901262
QAR 4.280334
RON 5.265784
RSD 117.377293
RUB 87.795473
RWF 1714.943042
SAR 4.399208
SBD 9.419773
SCR 16.367148
SDG 705.356436
SEK 10.854181
SGD 1.4893
SHP 0.876971
SLE 28.954576
SLL 24631.158596
SOS 671.301108
SRD 43.943644
STD 24312.231862
STN 24.901913
SVC 10.280503
SYP 130.621923
SZL 19.428198
THB 37.834281
TJS 10.979956
TMT 4.117038
TND 3.374091
TOP 2.8282
TRY 53.113783
TTD 7.962282
TWD 36.868914
TZS 3044.826098
UAH 51.515534
UGX 4418.174644
USD 1.174619
UYU 47.21178
UZS 14183.51893
VES 579.670053
VND 30921.832595
VUV 138.899141
WST 3.197999
XAF 653.763272
XAG 0.015185
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.174466
XCG 2.117594
XDR 0.818038
XOF 654.851416
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.293319
ZAR 19.256347
ZMK 10572.975752
ZMW 22.236385
ZWL 378.226685
  • CMSD

    0.1300

    23.42

    +0.56%

  • RBGPF

    0.0800

    63.18

    +0.13%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    13.17

    +0.99%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    23.01

    +0.56%

  • BCC

    2.1100

    74.24

    +2.84%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    24.23

    +0.54%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    35.75

    -1.15%

  • NGG

    0.2100

    87.85

    +0.24%

  • RYCEF

    1.0500

    17.5

    +6%

  • RIO

    5.0100

    105.51

    +4.75%

  • VOD

    0.3900

    16.13

    +2.42%

  • AZN

    3.6800

    184.92

    +1.99%

  • BTI

    0.1600

    59.56

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    50.53

    +0.3%

  • BP

    -1.8700

    44.63

    -4.19%

'Sowing peace'? Colombia program for war criminals stokes debate
'Sowing peace'? Colombia program for war criminals stokes debate / Photo: Raul ARBOLEDA - AFP

'Sowing peace'? Colombia program for war criminals stokes debate

Once confined to jail over the killings of hundreds under his watch, former Colombian general Henry Torres now spends his days planting trees and otherwise free.

Text size:

Like dozens of other alleged war criminals in the South American country, 61-year-old Torres is participating in an alternative sentencing program that some victims' families decry as a "mockery" of justice.

"We are not only restoring an ecosystem but trying to minimize the damage we caused... it was a way to compensate for damage without being deprived of freedom," he told AFP.

Torres commanded a brigade that was found responsible for hundreds of cold-blooded executions as the army sought to inflate results in its fight against leftist guerrillas.

Between 2002 and 2008, some 6,400 civilians were executed by the military, which presented them as enemy fighters, according to the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) court.

The JEP was set up after a 2016 peace deal between the government and the once-powerful FARC insurgent group to try the worst crimes committed during the decades-long conflict.

Under the peace deal, the court can offer alternatives to jail time or lesser sentences to people who confess their crimes and make reparations to victims.

"We are trying to reconcile our society after a very serious war. It is very new and very complex," JEP president Roberto Vidal told AFP.

Initiatives like "Sowing Peace," in which 46 soldiers are taking part, are "pilot projects through which we are learning how to set this up."

Victims' families are not happy.

"Come and plant trees... that is absolutely insufficient, a kind of mockery," said Margarita Arteaga, whose brother Kemel was killed by soldiers in 2007.

- Healing wounds -

Under the Bogota sun, a dozen men clear undergrowth with machetes.

The younger ones work the land, while Torres and other older men prepare saplings which will be used to reforest a 15-hectare area of southwestern Bogota that is home to many people displaced by the conflict.

"With this work, we are seeking to heal these wounds... to transform the damage caused," said retired major Gustavo Soto, 52.

As part of the peace process, Soto came face-to-face last year with the relatives of 85 civilians murdered by a unit under his command.

"It was quite difficult," he said of the experience.

In the early 2000s, Soto was part of a counterinsurgency launched under the right-wing government of Alvaro Uribe.

"Unfortunately, proven results were required in the form of combat casualties. It was how the upper command evaluated us," he said.

At the work site, Soto and other former soldiers clear invasive gorse bushes whose large thorns pierce through their thick overalls.

Torres and Soto were both in prison awaiting trial when the JEP granted them freedom in exchange for confessions and taking part in initiatives like "Sowing Peace."

They come voluntarily, under court supervision, with each day worked recognized as "advance" payment on the maximum eight-year penalty the JEP can impose.

The tribunal, which started operating in 2017, has yet to hand down any sentences.

Experts question whether the projects really impose the "effective restrictions on freedoms and rights" called for under the peace deal.

JEP judge Vidal said that participants may also be surveilled, including by "cell phone monitoring."

- Too good a 'deal?' -

Margarita Arteaga believes the military did "the deal of their lives" with the JEP.

Her brother Kemel was a craftsman and punk fan who was trying his hand at selling handmade earrings and necklaces when soldiers kidnapped him in a bar and executed him.

His killer told a JEP hearing that Kemel had been asked to be shot from the front. He didn't die immediately and had to be finished off on the ground, she learned.

"They planted a grenade and a revolver on him," Arteaga recalled through tears.

Soldiers presented him as an extortionist killed in an exchange of gunfire.

"I can understand the symbolic nature of the issue of the trees, but it does not repair" what was done, said Arteaga, a spokeswoman for a victims' association.

There are two other restorative justice initiatives in Colombia. In one, perpetrators are rebuilding an Indigenous civic center, and in the other, they provide education about the dangers of antipersonnel mines.

Arteaga proposes the programs go further, with soldiers like Torres made to visit battalions and "tell soldiers-in-training what they did, and what should not happen" ever again.

Y.Al-Shehhi--DT