The following is a 15 February 2000 CPJ press release: COLOMBIA: JOURNALIST REMAINS IN CAPTIVITY New York, Feb. 15, 2000—CPJ is deeply concerned about the safety of Guillermo Cortés, editorial director of “Hora Cero,” a nightly television news program broadcast on Canal A in Bogotá, who was kidnapped on January 22. While no one has […]
The following is a 15 February 2000 CPJ press release:
COLOMBIA: JOURNALIST REMAINS IN CAPTIVITY
New York, Feb. 15, 2000—CPJ is deeply concerned about the safety of Guillermo Cortés, editorial director of “Hora Cero,” a nightly television news program broadcast on Canal A in Bogotá, who was kidnapped on January 22. While no one has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, new
evidence points to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Colombia’s largest guerrilla group.
Cortés, a highly respected journalist known to his colleagues as “La Chiva” (Scoop), was kidnapped by six armed men from his weekend home in Choachí, in the mountains southeast of Bogotá. The region is a known FARC stronghold. The caretaker of Cortés’ property and a neighbor were both present at the time of the kidnapping. They reported that the kidnappers identified
themselves as members of FARC and said they were abducting Cortés in order to send a message to the government.
On January 29, at the start of a weekend-long ceremony inaugurating the headquarters for the peace negotiations in the hamlet of Los Pozos in the rebel-held San Vicente del Caguán Municipality, FARC leader Manuel Marulanda told the press they had been unfair to his group and would have to pay. But he denied responsibility for Cortés’ kidnapping. During a subsequent press conference held on February 9 in Stockholm (where government and rebel peace negotiators had traveled to study Sweden’s economic and social structure), FARC commander Raúl Reyes also denied responsibility for the kidnapping.
On February 2, the local press reported that Colombia’s military intelligence service had intercepted a telephone conversation believed to be between FARC leader Henry Castellanos Garzon, alias “Romaña,” and another FARC member, identified only as Karina 15. In the conversation, Karina 15 apparently gave the kidnapped journalist’s address and detailed his financial assets, including his Jeep Cherokee, an apartment, and shares in a company.
This bolsters the theory that one of the two FARC fronts active in the Choachí area (fronts 53 and 54) was responsible for the kidnapping. It has also led many local journalists to speculate that Cortés was kidnapped for economic reasons, and not to send a message to the government as was
initially believed.
On February 6, some 2,000 protesters gathered in Choachí to protest Cortés’ kidnapping. Cortés’ colleagues told CPJ that they feared for the health of the 73-year-old journalist because of the harsh conditions and low temperatures prevailing near Choachí, where he is believed to be held.
CPJ urges whoever is holding the reporter to release him immediately and without conditions of any kind.