The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kidnapped journalist team confirmed dead

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QUITO, Ecuador: Ecuador on Friday confirmed the deaths of two journalist­s and their driver who had been kidnapped by renegade Colombian rebels – and quickly launched a retaliator­y military operation in the area where they were snatched.

Bogota also sent troops into the dense jungle border zone where the remnants of the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebel group operate – a key point on the trade route for drugs destined for Central America or the United States.

The killings – after what is thought to be the first such abduction of journalist­s on Ecuadoran soil in three decades – have shaken a country unaccustom­ed to the cruel violence linked to traffickin­g that has ravaged Colombia.

The three men, who worked for the influentia­l El Comercio newspaper – were kidnapped on March 26 while covering a story on violence along the border, where Ecuadoran forces have been battling Colombian rebels engaged in drug traffickin­g.

Reporter Javier Ortega, 32, photograph­er Paul Rivas, 45, and their driver Efrain Segarra, 60, were snatched in the coastal region of Mataje on Ecuador’s northern border with Colombia.

Ecuadoran President Lenin Moreno had given the kidnappers a 12-hour window to provide proof of life for the trio, but that expired on Friday and he announced their deaths shortly thereafter.

“Sadly, we have informatio­n confirming the murder of our fellow countrymen,” Moreno told reporters in Quito, some of whom broke down in tears, while others exchanged embraces.

He then sent troops into the border zone.

“We have resumed ... military and police operations in the strip of land by the border where they were previously suspended and I am immediatel­y sending in a deployment of elite units from the army and the police,” Moreno said.

Ecuadoran officials believe the hostages were taken into Colombia and have made contact with both the Catholic Church and the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross for help in “immediatel­y starting” the process of locating their bodies and bringing them home.

Speaking in Lima, where he was attending the Summit of the Americas, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos denounced the murders as “a deplorable act,” confirming his troops had also been sent in.

“We have already started operations on the Colombian side of the border as they have in Ecuador,” he said, while insisting

Sadly, we have informatio­n confirming the murder of our fellow countrymen. — Lenin Moreno, Ecuadoran President

the abduction “happened in Ecuador” and was led by an Ecuadoran national.

Ecuador’s military has blamed the abduction on the Oliver Sinisterra Front, a group which counts between 70 and 80 rebels and is headed by Walter Artizala, an Ecuadoran in his 30s who goes by the name “Guacho”.

A former FARC rebel with expertise in explosives, drug smuggling and financing, Guacho is one of the most wanted men in both Colombia and Ecuador.

“We have included the drugsmuggl­ing terrorist Guacho on Ecuador’s most wanted list and we are offering a reward of 100,000 for any informatio­n which leads to his capture,” Moreno said.

According to Colonel Polibio Vinueza, who heads the police’s anti-hostage unit, Guacho had been in touch with the Ecuadoran authoritie­s “since April 7, using WhatsApp” with the aim of reaching a deal to swap them for three rebels held in Mataje on traffickin­g charges.

But as his own boss, and without anyone to answer to, the rebel chief could change his mind on a whim, “depending on circumstan­ces,” Vinueza explained.

Late Thursday, a visibly emotional Moreno had issued an ultimatum to the kidnappers after his government received photos from a Colombian TV station suggesting the three were dead.

Cutting short a trip to Lima for the Americas summit, he hunkered down with his cabinet to handle the crisis.

But as his 12-hour deadline passed, news of their fate became clear.

The murders were roundly denounced by government­s in the region and beyond, with Costa Rica expressing its “absolute condemnati­on” of the bloodshed and Spain denouncing it as a “vile and criminal act.”

The announceme­nt draws a line under a 19-day nightmare for the families, with informatio­n emerging on a piecemeal basis and often skewed by rumor and falsehoods. — AFP

 ??  ?? This combinatio­n of pictures shows (from left) Ortega, Rivas and Segarra who died in captivity after being abducted by renegade Colombian rebels. — AFP photo
This combinatio­n of pictures shows (from left) Ortega, Rivas and Segarra who died in captivity after being abducted by renegade Colombian rebels. — AFP photo

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