Colombia denies Ch谩vez's accusations that it plans to invade Venezuela
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Colombia has denied Venezuelan President Hugo Ch谩vez's accusations that Colombian forces plan to invade his country amid an escalating diplomatic row.
"Colombia has never thought of attacking its brother nation [Venezuela] as the president of that country says, in a clear political deception of his own country," Colombian President 脕lvaro Uribe's office said in a statement issued Saturday.
Colombia will, however, continue to insist that Venezuela stop harboring members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), even though Ch谩vez has consistently denied any collusion with the leftist rebels that have fought the Colombian government for decades.
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"Colombia has gone to the channels of international law and will continue insisting on those mechanisms so there is an instrument to make the Venezuelan government comply with its obligations not to harbor Colombian terrorists," said the statement.
Relations between the two nations have soured in recent days after Mr. Uribe presented evidence that Mr. Ch谩vez is harboring the FARC. On Friday, Ch谩vez declared that he had in response to a perceived threat from Colombian forces.
The latest round of sabre-rattling between Uribe and Ch谩vez was spurred ten days ago when Colombia presented evidence to the Organization of American States (OAS) of FARC forces camped within Venezuelan borders. 海角大神 reported that the tensions were such that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for restraint and several South American nations offered to mediate the dispute.
But The Washington Post reported yesterday that an emergency meeting of South American foreign ministers in Quito, Ecuador, ended Friday n of the diplomatic crisis, and that the relationship between the two nations is "in tatters."
According to Colombia's foreign minister, Venezuela's El Universal writes, the UNASUR ministers present had agreed on a declaration that would have included commitment to creating a "mechanism for effective cooperation and monitoring" of the FARC's presence within Venezuela, but that Venezuela "at the last minute." El Universal also reports that Venezuela a final declaration at the meeting, which Venezuela's foreign minister insisted was not the meeting's purpose.
FARC wants to talk?
Ironically, the ongoing spat between Ch谩vez and Uribe comes amid modest signs of hope for a resolution between the FARC and the incoming administration of President-elect Juan Manuel Santos, who is set to enter office on August 7. BBC News reports that FARC leader Alfonso Cano offered in a recently broadcast videotape to talk to Mr. Santos's administration in an to the guerrilla war the FARC has been waging since the 1960s.
"Between all of us, we have to find common ground and, with the input of a majority of Colombians, we have to identify the difficulties, the problems and contradictions, and create perspectives and a way out of the armed conflict," Mr. Cano said.
But Mr. Cano also criticized Santos, who served as defense minister under Uribe, and warned that the FARC would have "no other option but to continue the armed struggle" if Colombia continued its military campaign against the group.
Agence France-Presse reports that Vice-president elect Angelino Garzon responded to Cano's offer by insisting that the and cease its military operations before any talks can be held.
"The government of Juan Manuel Santos has not closed the door to peace, but we're demanding that the guerrillas release all the people they've kidnapped, stop their terrorist activities ... and free the children they've recruited by force," he said.
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