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News > Latin America

FARC Asks Town for Forgiveness for 2002 Tragedy That Killed 80

  • A presentation during the FARC's apology to the town of Bojaya, in western Choco, Colombia.

    A presentation during the FARC's apology to the town of Bojaya, in western Choco, Colombia. | Photo: EFE

Published 8 December 2015
Opinion

The guerrilla group also said it is willing to release a soldier being held in captivity, and is committed to reaching an agreement in the peace talks.

Delegates from the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrilla movement traveled to a the town of Bojaya to personally ask the locals for forgiveness for a 2002 accident that killed some 80 people

The delegation took part in a private ceremony Monday with the inhabitants of Bojaya in the western department of Choco to pay tribute to the deceased and ask for forgiveness. 

May 2, 2002, the guerrillas were engaged in a conflict with AUC (United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia) paramilitaries in the region, as the AUC was carrying out an expansion offensive in the area. 

RELATED: The Colombian Peace Process Explained

During the conflict, the FARC launched a handmade projectile at the paramilitary group, which was hiding near a church. However, instead of hitting the troops, the projectile exploded on the church, where some 80 of the 300 townspeople were hiding. 

“There never was the intention to harm the civilian population and less the elderly and children who died in this dreaded attack,” said Pastor Alape, one of the FARC delegates who traveled to the region to personally ask the townspeople for forgiveness.

Alape, who is also a member of the FARC's negotiating team at the ongoing peace talks in Cuba, was accompanied by other guerrillas and members of the Red Cross. 

The guerrilla leader added that the rebels will “compensate the damage done and repair the victims of these acts, as well as not ever repeat situations like this.”   

Meanwhile, the FARC also said Monday its willingness to release soldier Jesus Angel Rojas, who was seized in Caqueta while developing combat intelligence missions. 

In a statement released through their website, the FARC requested the participation of the Red Cross for the release process.

The insurgency claimed that the soldier was posing as a truck driver's assistant carrying a truck full of timber.

“We reject such practices, which not only endanger the lives of soldiers, but undermine the cease-fire established unilaterally by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia,” said the insurgents in a statement, adding that it seeks the peaceful conclusion of the current peace negotiations.  

The Red Cross has been involved as a mediator in previous prisoner exchanges. 

RELATED: Watch and Interview with Piedad Cordoba and FARC Leader Timoleon Jimenez 

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