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Sunday, November 22, 2009, Zil`Hajj 04, 1430 |
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Colombia on high alert against Venezuela
Bogota—Colombia warned its forces were on “maximum
alert” and were prepared to defend against any attack, amid rising
tensions with neighboring Venezuela.
Colombian Defense Minister Gabriel Silva issued the warning after a
meeting of the country’s national security council in Arauca, a city
on the eastern border with Venezuela.
He said President Alvaro Uribe and the military forces of Colombia
were intent on remaining calm “because they know there are
provocative forces on the border that must be avoided at all cost.”
But this “does not mean that we are not prepared or are not on
maximum alert to prevent any aggression against Colombia, against
Colombians or against our territory.”
Uribe’s national security council met for five hours in Arauca with
military and police commanders in the border area a day after Bogota
charged that Venezuelan troops had blown up two footbridges across
the border in northeastern Colombia.
Silva said the destruction of the bridges was an aggression against
the civilian population. “Those bridges were built more than 30
years ago, it was infrastructure built to bring the community
together, to work together,” he said.
Venezuela said Thursday the bridges were destroyed because they were
being used by drug traffickers and smugglers.
The two neighbors have long been at odds, but tensions have
sharpened in recent months over a US-Colombian agreement giving the
US military access to seven Colombian bases.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on July 28 suspended diplomatic
relations with Colombia and earlier this month warned his nation to
“prepare for war.”
Colombia responded by lodging a diplomatic note with the UN Security
Council accusing Caracas of threatening to use force against it.
Caracas then accused Bogota of detaining four of its soldiers in a
border river’s international waters.
The four members of Venezuela’s national guard, who were detained in
Colombia Saturday and released a day later, were not on Colombian
territory when they were taken, a Venezuelan national guard general
insisted.—AFP |
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