A spokesman for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, said the rebels were optimistic about coming to terms with the government, despite the obstacles.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN and JENNY CAROLINA GONZÁLEZ; William Neuman reported from Quito, and Jenny Carolina González from Bogotá, Colombia
President Juan Manuel Santos and the leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia said that the two sides would soon sit down to a new phase of peace talks.
After claiming half the BMX medals in Beijing, American riders were shut out in London, but the program director was excited about the young team’s chances in 2016.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN; Meridith Kohut contributed reporting from La Macanilla; María Eugenia Díaz from Caracas, Venezuela; and Jenny Carolina González from Bogotá, Colombia
Venezuela’s government has trumpeted one major blow after another against drug traffickers, but a visit to its remote western plains shows that its claims are greatly overstated.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN; Jenny Carolina González contributed reporting from Bogotá, Colombia, and Andrew W. Lehren from New York
Mauricio Santoyo, once a top official in President Álvaro Uribe’s government, is also accused of giving information that helped in targeting murder victims.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN and JENNY CAROLINA GONZÁLEZ; William Neuman reported from Caracas, and Jenny Carolina González from Bogotá, Colombia
Sigifredo López, who was kidnapped along with 11 other legislators in 2002, has been detained under suspicion of helping the FARC plan their abduction.
Medellín, Colombia, once famed for murder and cocaine, is now drawing notice for its ambitious urban projects, many aimed at easing life in the city’s slums.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN; Jenny Carolina González contributed reporting from Bogotá, Colombia
The attack on a former justice minister stunned residents of Bogotá, the Colombian capital, which is recovering from years of violence between the government, drug cartels and insurgents.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN; Jenny Carolina González contributed reporting from Bogotá, Colombia
Dispersed to nearby towns and cities, Gramalote, Colombia, residents are slowly returning to the devastated town, to live among the ruins or at least in sight of them.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN; Jenny Carolina González contributed reporting from Bogotá, Colombia
Romeo Langlois, who was working for a French television channel, disappeared on April 28 after a gunfight involving FARC guerrillas, who claimed Sunday to have him in custody.
New restrictions came two weeks after the Secret Service began investigating the activities of 12 agents and officers on a trip with President Obama to Colombia.
Officials determined that a Secret Service employee had been wrongly linked to the prostitution case because a hotel guest had given an incorrect room number.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN; Jenny Carolina González contributed reporting from Bogotá, Colombia, and Meridith Kohut from Cartagena
Cartagenans have struggled to come to terms with the commotion over the Secret Service scandal, but are also feeling anger and wounded national pride over an agent’s behavior.
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and ERIC SCHMITT; Peter Baker contributed reporting from Chapel Hill, N.C., and Elisabeth Bumiller from Brasília
As the Secret Service pursues an inquiry into allegations of egregious behavior by agents during President Obama’s trip to Colombia, investigators have pieced together a more nuanced story.
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta said security clearances had been suspended for some of the 11 military members under investigation in the prostitution scandal in Cartagena, Colombia.
By HELENE COOPER; Doug Mills and Michael S. Schmidt contributed reporting
The Obama administration is wrestling with how to react to the alleged misconduct of Secret Service agents, men charged with protecting the president at any cost.
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and WILLIAM NEUMAN; Michael S. Schmidt reported from Washington, and William Neuman from Cartagena, Colombia
The Secret Service director briefed President Obama on an inquiry into misconduct with prostitutes in Colombia, as the military investigated separately.
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and WILLIAM NEUMAN; Michael S. Schmidt reported from Washington, and William Neuman from Cartagena, Colombia. Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington
An investigation into the behavior of Secret Service members has been widened to determine if the misconduct was confined to the 11 employees who were first tied to the scandal, according to an American official.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT; William Neuman reported from Cartagena, Colombia, and Michael S. Schmidt from Washington. Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington
A dispute over what a Secret Service agent owed a Colombian woman working as a high-priced escort led to a scandal that has now prompted the exit of three employees from the agency.
By WILLIAM NEUMAN and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT; William Neuman reported from Cartagena, and Michael S. Schmidt from Washington. Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington, and Jenny Carolina González from Bogotá, Colombia
Investigators are searching for as many as 21 women who are believed to include prostitutes and to have spent the night with a group of security officers.
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Under a torn Colombian flag on a windy hilltop, a ragtag guerrilla militia gathers. One fighter is missing an arm. Another, a leg. A commander who can barely read but goes by the alias “the Poet” tells of a recent firefight with a paramilitary squad in the hills nearby. It might be just another scene from Colombia’s decades of guerrilla warfare were it not for a puzzling fact: The group the fighters say they belong to, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, laid down its arms after it signed a peace deal meant to end the longest war in the Americas. The peace accords signed in 2016 by then-President Juan Manuel Santos and the rebels were meant to bring an end to five decades of fighting that left at least 220,000 dead and nearly 6 million people displaced from their homes. Behind the agreement, though, loomed a fear: That many of the thousands of fighters granted amnesty under the pact might sour on civilian life and pick up arms again.
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