Times of Oman

Colombia begins exhuming ‘false positives’ scandal victims

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BOGOTA: Forensic scientists have started to exhume dozens of bodies in connection to the “false positives” military scandal, Colombian officials said on Saturday.

“False positives” are civilians who were killed by Colombian soldiers and later made to appear as guerrillas. They were falsely identified as combatants so that soldiers could gain military decoration­s, promotions and other benefits.

“It is presumed that the remains of more than 50 people illegitima­tely presented as combatant casualties are in the cemetery of Dabeiba,” said the Special Jurisdicat­ion for Peace (JEP). It noted that the exhumation process began earlier in the week.

The JEP was establishe­d as part of a peace accord between the Colombian government and the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) that formally ended half a century of conflict in the South American country. Its mandate is to probe atrocities committed during the conflict.

Bloody conflict

The JEP said an ex-army member had voluntaril­y indicated knowledge of “false positives” victims in the Debeiba cemetery, which it then contrasted with other evidence.

Initial assessment­s indicate that the victims were men between the ages of 15 and 56. “Among those are people with disabiliti­es,” the JEP said.

In some cases, the military lured poor victims with promises of jobs in a fake recruitmen­t process. The civilians were then transporte­d to conflict areas, where they were executed, dressed in guerilla-style clothing and dubbed combatants.

More than 150 military officers have provided testimony about

“false positives” to the JEP, with some cases dating as far back as 1988 and as recently as 2014.

According to Colombian prosecutor­s, roughly 5,000 cases involving “false positives” have been attributed to the armed forces. However, only low-ranking soldiers have been convicted.

“None of these crimes were ever investigat­ed by the ordinary justice system,” the JEP said.

The Debeiba cemetary, where the exhumation­s are underway, is located in the administra­tive region of Antioquia, in Colombia’s northwest. communist dictatorsh­ip in 1989, Iohannis helped transform his country into the most European state in the region, the board of directors said.

“Romania is a country that has establishe­d itself as modern and technologi­cal,” directorat­e spokesman Jürgen Linden said, adding that what Iohannis had achieved was “one of the greatest advances in integratio­n since 1989.”

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