DNA tests indicate that there is a high probability that a boy held in
a state child protection facility is the son of Clara Rojas, a hostage
of leftist rebels who gave birth to the boy in captivity, Colombian
Attorney General Mario Iguaran said Friday.
After meeting with other high government officials in the northern
Colombian city of Santa Marta, Iguaran said the tests carried out by
Colombian authorities will be complemented by laboratory tests in
Europe.
The young Emmanuel, thought to be three-and-a-half, was to have
been handed over by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez along with his mother and former
legislator Consuelo Gonzalez in a high-profile operation.
However, FARC called off the operation on Monday, claiming that
military activity in the jungle prevented them from handing over their
hostages.
In a startling turn of events, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe
immediately made public the hypothesis that FARC did not have the boy
at all - and that was the reason it cancelled the handover.
Testing has now confirmed that Juan David Gomez Tapiero, who has
lived in a state child protection facility since 2005, is likely to be
Rojas' son - whom she reportedly named Emmanuel.
Clara Rojas is thought to have conceived the boy within a consented
relationship with a rank-and-file rebel. According to a former hostage
who escaped from FARC last year, the baby suffered health problems and
generally caused difficulties for the mobility and the discretion of
rebels and other hostages in the Colombian jungle.
Due to the boy's poor health, FARC is thought to have handed him
over to a peasant family in the southern town of San Jose del Guaviare,
and the authorities took Emmanuel from the family given that his
condition appeared to indicate that he was being mistreated.
FARC had allegedly asked the peasants to return the boy by December 30, 2007.
Colombian authorities took DNA samples from several members of Rojas' family earlier this week.
Rojas was the running-mate of former Colombian presidential
candidate Ingrid Betancourt, who holds dual French-Colombian
citizenship and is the most high-profile hostage among hundreds being
held by FARC.