Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
Oct 1, 2008
 
   
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U.S. identifies FARC
operative protected in Nicaragua
By Tim Rogers
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net

GRANADA, Nicaragua – A new designation by the U.S. government indentifying a woman recently granted asylum in Nicaragua as a “key member” of a terrorist organization and international drug kingpin has raised new concerns that Nicaragua is developing an image as a haven for terrorists.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) yesterday designated eight international representatives of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), considered a “narco-terrorist organization” by the U.S. Among the identified FARC members is Nubia Calderón de Trujillo, aka “Esperanza,” who was recently granted asylum in Nicaragua by President Daniel Ortega.

“Today's designation exposes eight ‘International Commission members' of the FARC,” said Adam J. Szubin, director of OFAC, in an official government release. “Through their service to the FARC as international representatives and negotiators, these persons provide material support to a narco-terrorist organization.”

Calderón, a survivor of the Colombian military bomb attack on a FARC jungle camp in Ecuador on March 1, is identified by the U.S. government as the rebel group's representative for Ecuador. She has reportedly been recovering in Nicaragua for more than a month along with three other survivors from the bombing raid on the FARC camp, which killed 21 guerrillas, including FARC's No. 2 leader, Raúl Reyes.

Ortega has granted all four survivors asylum in Nicaragua for “humanitarian reasons” and has reportedly put them up in homes paid for with government funds.

Independent lawmaker Jamileth Bonilla, president of the National Assembly's Commission on Foreign Affairs, told The Nica Times yesterday that Ortega's relationship with FARC is putting Nicaragua in a “delicate situation” both politically and economically by creating the image of a terrorist haven and scaring away investors.

FARC has been designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. government since 1997 and was identified as a “significant foreign narcotics trafficker” in 2003 by U.S. President George W. Bush. 

Yesterday's action by the U.S. government freezes any assets the designated entities and individuals may have under U.S. jurisdiction and prohibits U.S. persons from conducting financial or commercial transactions involving those assets.

 
 
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