Colombia rebels reject demobilization plea, vow fight

BOGOTA, (Reuters) – Colombia’s FARC rebels scorned  the “happy laughter” of their foes and rejected a plea to  demobilize after the killing of their leader Alfonso Cano gave  President Juan Manuel Santos his biggest military victory.

Many Colombians hoped the death of the 63-year-old Marxist  commander in a raid on his jungle hideout on Friday might would  herald the beginning of the end of nearly five decades of civil  war that have wracked the Andean nation.
Santos specifically appealed for them to lay down arms.

But no one expected the drug trade-funded group to give up  quickly, and instead they vowed to carry on their fight.

“This will not be the first time the oppressed and  exploited in Colombia are mourning one of their greatest  leaders,” the FARC said late on Saturday in a statement on the  www.anncol.info website, which often carries their messages.

“Neither is it the first time they will replace them, with  the courage and absolute conviction in victory. Peace in  Colombia will not come from guerrilla demobilization but from  the definitive abolition of the causes of the uprising.”

Starting as a Marxist-inspired peasant uprising seeking an  end to sharp wealth inequality, the FARC has come to rely  increasingly on the cocaine trade for financing Latin America’s  longest insurgency.

 THOUSANDS DEAD

Tens of thousands of Colombians have died, although  government military offensives since 2002, backed by U.S.  funding and expertise, have weakened the rebels considerably.

The killing of Cano, who had a $3.7 million bounty on his  head, was expected to further damage their ability to carry out  the high-profile bombings, ambushes and kidnappings that at one  time made Colombia a byword for violence and bloodshed.