Colombian soccer players found dead in Venezuela

 CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuela said yesterday at  least 10 members of an amateur Colombian soccer team had been  found dead after being kidnapped on its side of the border.  

The murders added another complication to fractious ties  between the two South American neighbors. Venezuela’s leftist  president, Hugo Chavez, stirred up things more by calling the  Colombian defence minister a “mental retard.”  

Caracas broke off relations and minimized trade earlier  this year due to Colombia’s acceptance of U.S. military bases  on its soil. Bogota is one of the main U.S. allies in the  region, whereas Chavez is a highly vocal critic of Washington.  

The Colombian soccer players, seized on Oct. 11, were found  with bullet wounds in various parts of western Tachira state,  Venezuelan Vice President Ramon Carrizalez told reporters.  

One of the 12 men survived the ordeal, while another was  still missing, Venezuelan authorities said.  

Kidnappings and armed disputes are rife on both sides of  the frontier, where Colombian guerrilla groups, paramilitary  militia and criminal gangs all operate.  

Carrizalez said the deaths of the football players, whom  local media have said were local tradesmen in Venezuela for a  match, were related to Colombia’s internal conflict. He gave no  further details.  

Colombia offered to cooperate with Venezuelan authorities  in bringing those responsible for the deaths to justice.  

“This deplorable act shows that terrorism is international,  that it does not respect frontiers,” Colombian President Alvaro  Uribe told reporters. 

Chavez, during his weekly television show, expressed  outrage at comments on Friday by Colombian Defence Minister  Gabriel Silva that most illegal flights hauling Colombian drugs  to Central America and the United States were now leaving from  Venezuela.