The Colombian Army rescued safe and sound ex presidential
candidate Ingrid Betancourt, three US citizens and 11 military
officers held as hostages by the rebel Colombian Revolutionary
Armed Forces (FARC), on Wednesday announced Colombian Defense
Minister Juan Manuel Santos.
"They were rescued in an operation aimed at infiltrating
the FARC first squad, the same that has held a large number
of hostages for years. Through several procedures, we also
could infiltrate the FARC Secretariat. Since hostages were
divided into three groups, we managed to have them gathered
at one single place and then moved to the south of the country,
where they would supposed to report to (new FARC top leader)
Alfonso Cano," said Santos.
The minister added that arrangements were made so that the
hostages were picked up in pre-established place by a helicopter
belonging to a ghost organization and that a FARC leader known
as César and another member of FARC Secretariat traveled
together with the hostages to hand them over to Cano.
Santos said the freed hostages are flying in choppers to
San José del Guaviare, capital city of the Guaviare region.
"This operation, called 'Check,' is unprecedented and a proof
of Colombian military forces' quality and professionalism,"
pointed out Santos.
Betancourt, a French-Colombian citizen, three US nationals
and 11 military officers would be taken later to Tolemaida
air base, in Tolima Department, some 120 miles from Bogotá.
The former hostages are: Ingrid Betancourt, Thomas Howes,
Marc Gonsalves, Keith Stansell, lieutenant Juan Carlos Bermeo,
second lieutenant Raimundo Malagón, sergeant José
Ricardo Marulanda, corporal William Pérez, sergeant Erasmo
Romero, corporal José Miguel Arteaga, corporal Armando
Florez, corporal Julio Buitrago (police), assistant superintendent
Armando Castellanos (police), lieutenant Vainey Rodríguez
and corporal John Jairo Durán (police).