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For FARC hostages, a combined hundred years of solitude

The FARC released 10 hostages yesterday, each held for over a decade. The release was a step in the right direction, says Colombia's president, but a peace deal is not imminent.

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Fernando Vergara/AP
Former hostages army sergeant Luis Alfonso Beltran, right, and police officer Jorge Trujillo Solarte, second from left, arrive to an airport after being released by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), in Villavicencio Colombia, Monday.

After spending as long as 14 years held by leftist rebels in the jungles of Colombia, four soldiers and six policemen are now reuniting with children they barely know, wives they鈥檝e never forgotten, and parents who never gave up hope of seeing their sons again.

The ten men were released yesterday by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country鈥檚 largest rebel group. They were the last of what the rebels considered 鈥渟wappable鈥 hostages, which they had hoped to exchange for jailed rebels.

The underweight hostages returned from the jungles with stomach problems, some parakeets, and a pet peccary, a wild pig common in the Amazon region.

The father of released hostage Wilson Rojas told El Tiempo newspaper that the reunion with his son was very emotional. 鈥淲e hugged for three minutes and cried a lot. We choked up and couldn鈥檛 speak a single word,鈥 said Victor Rojas. Wilson Rojas鈥檚 daughter Dayana was just two years old when he was kidnapped in July 1999, and yesterday he was greeted by a teenager.

Jonathan Salcedo said his father Sgt. Robinson Slacedo 鈥 who was kidnapped in 1998 when Jonathan was just four 鈥 didn鈥檛 recognize him. 鈥淚 told him, 鈥業鈥檓 your son,鈥欌 the young man said. His father brought him some tamed parakeets from the jungles where he was held captive for 14 years.

Contrary to previous hostage releases where reunions took place on airport tarmacs in view of dozens of television cameras, the family reunions yesterday evening were private and intimate. The former captives have not spoken to the press.

After visiting the former hostages today, President Juan Manuel Santos said he hopes the FARC will make good on their promise to end the practice of kidnapping, a commitment the rebels made in February when announcing the release of the ten servicemen.聽 In a brief statement yesterday following the release, Mr. Santos said freeing the soldiers and policemen was a gesture that 鈥渨e value in all its dimensions鈥 and that it was an 鈥渋mportant step in the right direction.鈥

But, he added, 鈥淚t is not enough to end [the practice of] kidnapping. There are hundreds of families that don鈥檛 know the whereabouts of their loved ones who were kidnapped,鈥 Santos said. 鈥淎ll hostages that are still in [the FARC鈥檚] power must be released.鈥

The exact number of hostages still held by the FARC is hard to come by. However, the Pais Libre Foundation, which tracks kidnapping in Colombia, estimates there are 405 unaccounted hostages.

The FARC reiterated its call to begin peace talks with the government in a communiqu茅 to the humanitarian commission who retrieved the hostages yesterday. While Santos welcomes the steps the FARC is taking, he also tried to temper hopes that negotiations are imminent.

鈥淲hen the government considers the conditions are right, and there are guarantees to start a [peace] process that will end the conflict, the country will know,鈥 he said.

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