COLOMBIA: DEFENCE TEAM VISITS THREE IRISHMEN ACCUSED OF BELONGING TO THE IRA AND TRAINING COLOMBIAN REBELS
Record ID:
645978
COLOMBIA: DEFENCE TEAM VISITS THREE IRISHMEN ACCUSED OF BELONGING TO THE IRA AND TRAINING COLOMBIAN REBELS
- Title: COLOMBIA: DEFENCE TEAM VISITS THREE IRISHMEN ACCUSED OF BELONGING TO THE IRA AND TRAINING COLOMBIAN REBELS
- Date: 31st July 2003
- Summary: BOGOTA, COLOMBIA (JULY 29, 2003) (REUTERS) SLV EXTERIOR OF PRISON; SLV INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS EXITING PRISON (3 SHOTS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) DEFENCE SPOKESPERSON JEAN CROWE SAYING "I'd be very worried about the men travelling the jail tomorrow, particularly of the background today of the weapons being found in the jail. So there's always that danger when they're leaving the secure part of the jail that they may be attacked on the way. We're extremely angry about the statements that have been made by the general." (SOUNDBITE) (English) EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT MEMBER NIALL ANDERSON, SAYING "I think the Colombian government has a very difficult position and I have to say they have shown great restraint on the issue. But they have shown they're in a very difficult position and international law and a as matter of basic human rights the intervention of that kind simply doesn't stand up to scrutiny." MV INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS IN FRONT OF JAIL (2 SHOTS)
- Embargoed: 15th August 2003 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: BOGOTA AND UNIDENTIFIED LOCATION, COLOMBIA
- Country: Colombia
- Topics: Crime,General,Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA3OQIIRBF8W72SB0MF6R9I4NCO
- Story Text: Defence team visits three Irishmen accused of belonging to IRA and training Colombian rebels in prison a day before trial ends.
A Colombian prosecutor on Monday (July 28, 2003) called for three Irishmen he said were Republican guerrillas to get up to 20 years in jail for teaching Marxist rebels advanced bomb-making techniques.
"The state prosecutor ratifies its charges and requests an exemplary sentence," state prosecutor Carlos Sanchez told the Bogota court, which resumed for closing arguments after a mid-June adjournment.
Jim Monaghan, Niall Connolly and Martin McCauley, who were arrested in August 2001 as they tried to leave Colombia using false passports, deny being members of the Irish Republican Army or instructing the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as FARC, the nation's most notorious rebel group.
The trio say they spent weeks in an impoverished region of southern Colombia controlled by the FARC during now defunct peace talks enjoying the sights, researching journalistic stories and studying the negotiations between the government and the rebels.
But the prosecutor dismissed this claim.
"There is not a guide nor a taxi driver who saw them engaged in their supposed bucolic activities or journalism.
On the contrary, everything indicates they were training the FARC (rebels)," Sanchez said.
The trial, conducted by a judge without a jury, has shaken Northern Ireland's fragile peace process.
Investigators here have blamed IRA know-how for increasingly sophisticated attacks including a car bomb last February that killed 36 people and a mortar attack aimed at President Alvaro Uribe's swearing-in ceremony in 2002.
The defence says there is no hard evidence and has produced a video that it says shows Monaghan in Belfast at a time when a prosecution witness recounted seeing him in structing Colombian rebels.
The three men, who have up to now refused to appear at what they say is a politically motivated trial, were due to show up for the first time on Wednesday (July 30), said a spokeswoman for the "Bring them Home Campaign" organized in Ireland.
Judge Jairo Acosta is legally obliged to deliver a verdict within 15 days of hearing closing arguments, but admits that the complexity of the case which has already dragged on for more than six months means he is likely to need more time.
Acosta will also decide the sentence and has dismissed defense claims that he is under government pressure to find the men guilty and jail them for as long as possible. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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