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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Guardian Staff and agencies

Colombian ex-paramilitary leader jailed for crimes against Indigenous groups

Salvatore Mancuso gestures with his hand raised
Salvatore Mancuso, a former leader of the AUC paramilitary faction, was found to be responsible for 117 crimes committed by fighters under his command. Photograph: Iván Valencia/AP

A Colombian court has sentenced a former paramilitary leader to 40 years in prison for crimes committed against Indigenous communities in the province of La Guajira, including homicides, forced disappearances and the displacement of people from 2002 to 2006.

The special tribunal that hears cases from the country’s armed conflict said in its ruling that Salvatore Mancuso was responsible for 117 crimes committed by fighters under his command in La Guajira. However, it added that Mancuso’s time in prison could be reduced to eight years, if he collaborated with truth and reparation activities that benefited victims of his former paramilitary group.

Colombia’s decades-long internal conflict has led to several peace negotiations between the government and guerrillas and armed groups, including a 2016 peace deal with the Farc, the largest guerrilla group.

Mancuso, 61, was repatriated to Colombia in 2024 after serving a lengthy prison sentence in the US for drug trafficking. The former paramilitary leader, who also holds Italian citizenship, was denied several requests to be sent to Italy after completing his sentence in the US, where he had been extradited in 2008.

In the late 1990s, Mancuso was one of the commanders of the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC), a rightwing paramilitary faction that worked with drug traffickers and the country’s business, military and political elite to sow terror and wipe out leftwing insurgencies.

At least 450,000 people were killed in Colombia’s armed conflict between 1985 and 2018, according to a report published by a truth commission in 2022, including civilians, rebel fighters, soldiers and members of paramilitary groups.

Mancuso’s group pushed the rebels out of some rural areas, but was accused of killing hundreds of innocent villagers.

AUC began to disarm in 2003 after an agreement with the Colombian government that provided reduced sentences to its leaders. But the paramilitary group was succeeded by a second generation of rightwing militias that continue to operate in Colombia, including the Gulf Clan, a group with approximately 10,000 fighters.

Mancuso was freed from US prison in February 2024 and deported to Colombia, where he remained in custody for several months. He was freed in July after various courts determined there were no prison sentences pending against him.

When he was repatriated to Colombia, Mancuso was named a “peace facilitator” by Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, a designation that enables him to act as a mediator in talks with armed groups.

Colombia’s government is engaged in peace talks with the Gulf Clan, which the US designated as a foreign terrorist organisation in December.

With reporting by the Associated Press

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