BUCARAMANGA, Colombia (AP) — Colombia’s army rescued six siblings after they spent three days hiding in the rainforest to avoid being captured by a rebel group in the southwestern province of Caqueta.
Defense Minister Pedro Sánchez said on X that five children and their adult sister were airlifted from a remote location following a “precise operation” involving helicopters.
“Attacking the civilian population, and especially minors is one of the worst inhumane acts, and when you do this repeatedly it becomes a war crime,” Sánchez said Tuesday.
The Defense Ministry said that a rebel group led by Alexander Díaz, a former commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was attempting to capture the children after kidnapping their parents.
After the parents escaped captivity last week and sought refuge at a military base, the rebel group threatened to capture their children. In response, the family sent a worker to hide the children in a rainforest near the family’s farm in the municipality of Cartagena del Chaira.
The parents shared the children's location with the army, which was able to rescue them in the early hours of Tuesday.
Alexander Díaz, commonly known as Calarca, is one of several former FARC commanders who refused to join a 2016 peace deal with Colombia’s government.
He currently leads a group known as the EMBF that is in peace talks with the administration of President Gustavo Petro, and signed an agreement with the government last year in which it had said it would not recruit minors.
The Petro administration has attempted to hold peace talks with Colombia’s remaining rebel groups under a strategy known as total peace, which has shown few results so far.
According to international observers, groups like the EMBF have used various ceasefires with Colombia’s military to regroup, rearm and tighten their control over communities.
As rebel groups expand across Colombia, they continue to commit grave crimes against civilians, including kidnapping, forced displacement and the recruitment of children.
According to UNICEF, the forced recruitment of children by illegal armed groups in Colombia has quadrupled over the last five years. Humanitarian groups have said that these numbers could be an undercount because many families are reluctant to denounce cases of forced recruitment, fearing retribution from rebel groups.
___
Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
LATEST POSTS
- 1
If evolution is real, then why isn’t it happening now? An anthropologist explains that humans actually are still evolving - 2
Eleven Creations And Developments That Steered History - 3
A decade after Brazil’s deadly dam collapse, Indigenous peoples demand justice on the eve of COP30 - 4
Norovirus is spreading earlier again this year, wastewater data shows - 5
Council removes proposal to rename park named after former president of Israel
Extraordinary Shows to Long distance race on a Plane
A Timeline of Rising Antisemitism in Australia
Step by step instructions to Pick the Right Dental specialist for Your Teeth Substitution
The most effective method to Go Down Abundance through Ages with Disc Rates
Space debris: will it take a catastrophe for nations to take the issue seriously?
NASA’s Pandora telescope will study stars in detail to learn about the exoplanets orbiting them
7 Fun Plans to Make Film Evenings Seriously Invigorating (You'll Cherish #5!)
Eleven arrested over mass shooting in South Africa tavern
UN chief warns he could refer Israel to ICJ over laws targetting UNRWA













