Two Venezuelan helicopters arrived Thursday in the Colombian town of
San Jose del Guaviare, in a second attempt to secure the release of two
hostages held by leftist rebels.
Irma Alvarez, spokeswoman for the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) in Venezuela, told Venezuelan state television channel
VTV that the operation had been launched.
The effort seeks to secure the freedom of former vice presidential
candidate, 44-year-old Clara Rojas and former legislator Consuelo
Gonzalez, 57.
The two women have been held by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC) for over six years years, along with hundreds of
civilians and Colombian officials that have been held in some cases for
more than 10 years.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Wednesday that the
helicopters would fly to the Colombian province of Guaviare, and that
he expected Rojas and Gonzalez to be free Thursday since FARC had given
him the coordinates to find them.
The Colombian government authorized the mission and ordered the
suspension of military operations in a large area of the southern
province of Guaviare.
Colombian Defence Ministry sources said the helicopters were to
refill their fuel tanks in San Jose del Guaviare and would then leave
for the exact coordinates where FARC said they could find the hostages.
Afterwards, the machines were expected to travel directly back to
Venezuela.
Unlike a high-profile international effort to free these hostages
that failed last week, the latest operation was being handled with
great discretion by the Venezuelan government.
Venezuelan helicopters were flying under ICRC symbols, and each one
was carrying a delegate of the Red Cross, which was taking part in the
operation alongside the governments of Venezuela and Colombia.
Alvarez said that the Colombian government guaranteed the security of those involved in the effort.
The operation to free the two hostages, and Rojas' 3-year-old son
Emmanuel, failed last week, apparently due to the fact that the boy had
already been released to a child protection facility in 2005.
Gonzalez, then a legislator, was kidnapped on September 10, 2001.
Rojas, in turn, was kidnapped on February 23, 2002 along with her
party's presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, who holds dual
French-Colombian citizenship and is the highest-profile hostage held by
FARC.