Cuba's former President Fidel Castro has called on the Colombian Farc 
rebel movement to release all of its remaining hostages.
His comments follow the rescue of Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt 
and 14 others on Wednesday.
He said he had energetically criticised the "cruel methods of kidnapping 
and holding prisoners in the jungle".
But at the same time, Mr Castro added the rebel movement should not lay 
down its weapons.
He said that, during the past 50 years, those rebel groups that had 
yielded "did not survive to see the peace".
"I have openly and energetically criticised the objectively cruel 
methods of kidnapping and holding prisoners in the jungle," he wrote in 
an internet article posted on Sunday.
"If I may dare to suggest something to the Farc guerrillas, it is that 
they simply, by whatever means at their disposal, declare that they have 
unconditionally freed all the hostages and prisoners still under their 
control."
Fidel Castro's revolution in Cuba served as an inspiration to the Farc 
when it formed in the 1960s.
Tricked
Earlier, Ms Betancourt said she was planning to write a play about her 
experience of being held hostage by the Colombian rebels for six years.
She also said she had been given a clean bill of health after undergoing 
medical tests following her release from the Colombian jungle on Wednesday.
The former Colombian presidential candidate, who has dual 
French-Colombian nationality, was freed along with 14 other hostages 
after their captors were apparently tricked into handing them over to 
army personnel disguised as independent agency staff.
On Friday Ms Betancourt - who grew up, studied and raised her family in 
France - was flown from Colombia to Paris on a French presidential plane.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/7492506.stm
Published: 2008/07/06 21:39:06 GMT
No comments:
Post a Comment