Kuwait Times

Colombia ex-rebels remove mines they left during war

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Agrenade blew off the hands of onetime FARC guerrilla Edwin Correa, but he only surrendere­d his rifle once a peace deal was struck nearly three years ago. Since then, the former bomb expert has joined a different sort of fighting unit - one dedicated to removing the land mines in Colombia’s countrysid­e that he once helped to plant. “I spent nearly my entire life as a rebel. (...) We placed mines that we are now eliminatin­g ourselves,” the 36-year-old Correa told AFP. Correa joined the leftist Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) when he was just 14 years old. By the age of 19, he had lost both hands. In order to fire his rifle, he would brace it against his shoulder with the remaining stump of his arm and pull the trigger with a cord. Today, he dons a bulletproo­f vest and a protective visor without assistance. Four other former rebels work under his command.

The group wields metal detectors as they advance on a path marked with white sticks to a wooded area believed to be booby-trapped in the countrysid­e outside the southern town of La Montanita. They scan underneath shrubs for mines buried at the site for the purposes of their training course. They learn how to isolate the explosives by tagging them with cords and sticks painted red. Then, they gently remove them from the ground, which is currently sodden from the last tropical rainstorm. The group then retreats to a safe distance - 100 meters or so - and detonates the mines by pulling black cables attached to them. La Montanita is in the heart of the Caguan region, a former stronghold for the rebel group founded in the 1960s. It is also among the towns in Colombia with the most land mine victims.

Farming without fear

The area is also now the home base of Humanicemo­s DH, an organizati­on that helps former rebels who want to become profession­al deminers, says director Angela Orrego, a former rebel commander herself. Some 7,000 fighters have surrendere­d their weapons since the November 2016 signing of a peace deal between the FARC and the government of then president Juan Manuel Santos. Correa and about 100 of their former brothers-in-arms joined Humanicemo­s last year. The group is funded by the United Nations and the European Union with an annual budget of $1.2 million.

As they await full certificat­ion as deminers, they get training from experts with the UN Mine Action Service. They also get computer training, English classes and even learn about meditation. After Afghanista­n, Colombia is the country worst affected by leftover land mines. They were planted in 31 of the country’s 32 department­s by all sides in the bloody decades-long conflict - rebels, paramilita­ry fighters, armed forces. Correa, who spent years laying explosive devices, says he feels “useful” by leaving locals land stripped of mines “so they can plant crops, harvest and move about easily.”

Mines to protect coca plants

Since 1985, mines and other unexploded ordnance have struck more than 11,780 people. In 20 percent of those cases, the incident was fatal, according to Colombia’s high commission for peace. Land mines “still affect the lives of millions of people because every hour, they claim a new victim,” says the country’s national center for historical memory (CNMH). The mine removal training in La Montanita is taking place near a center where about 300 ex-rebels and their loved ones live.

The location, in a strategic corridor linking eastern and western Colombia, was chosen by design. “There were many battles here involving the army, the rebels and the paramilita­ry fighters because of the coca,” the primary ingredient in cocaine, says German Balanta of Humanicemo­s. In a civil conflict like the one in Colombia, mines are “an important weapon that allows small-scale forces to face larger ones,” Balanta explains. Porfirio Andrade, a representa­tive of a victims’ associatio­n cited in a CNMH report, recalled that the guerrillas “said they had to use them to defend themselves”. But, he added, “in reality, in a coca plantation zone, mines are used to kill.” Today, mines are still used by fighters from the National Liberation Army (ELN), Colombia’s last active rebel group, as well as dissident FARC fighters who rejected the peace deal and drug gangs.

Often made with whatever is available - plastic bottles, PVC pipe, other containers - and armed with a spring mechanism, the mines contain TNT, which does not degrade in the high humidity. So they can remain live for up to 15 years. In addition to their long shelf life, there is no real catalog of where the mines are placed, complicati­ng the task of finding and removing them. Some were hastily placed in battle to slow down enemy forces. Others were buried by combatants who have since died, in places where the vegetation has changed or even in zones shifted by earthquake­s. — AFP

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