In 1966, communist militants and
peasant self-defense groups formed FARC, Colombia's oldest
guerrilla group, as the military wing of the Colombian Communist
Party.
FARC is Colombia's largest and
best-equipped rebel group, with as many as 46,000 members. It is
also one of the world�s richest and most powerful guerrilla
armies, operating in almost half the country, mostly in the
jungles of the southeast and the plains at the base of the Andes
Mountains.
FARC claims to represent the
rural poor against Colombia's wealthy classes and opposes
American influence in Colombia, the privatization of natural
resources, multinational corporations and paramilitary violence.
These issues motivate the group's efforts to seize power in
Colombia through an armed revolution.
In 1999, during peace
negotiations between the Colombian government and FARC, then
President Andres Pastrana ceded control of an area twice the
size of New Jersey to FARC. After three years of fruitless
negotiations and a series of high-profile terrorist acts,
Pastrana ended the peace talks in February 2002 and ordered
Colombian forces to start retaking the FARC-controlled zone.
The guerrillas are funded
principally through extortion, kidnapping and the cocaine trade.
FARC is responsible for most of the ransom kidnappings in
Colombia; the group targets wealthy landowners, foreign tourists
and prominent international and domestic officials.
Many of their militant fronts
have also overrun and massacred small communities in order to
silence and intimidate those who do not support their
activities, enlist new and underage recruits by force,
distribute propaganda and pillage local banks. Unlike the
right-wing paramilitaries, FARC has refused to negotiate with
the Uribe government.
By waging bloody attacks on
civilians in the days leading up the March 2006 legislative
election, FARC brought activity in at least ten of the country's
provinces to a total or partial halt.
(from PBS.org series on
Colombia http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/lasierra/rebels.html)
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