[NYTr] Chavez Is Right: Gen.Santander at root of political intolerance in Colombia Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 22:38:27 -0600 (CST) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit Progreso Weekly - Nov 29, 2007 http://progreso-weekly.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=248&Itemid=1 ChC!vez is right Gen. Santander is at the root of political intolerance in Colombia By Hernando Calvo Ospina On Nov. 20, in an unexpected move, Colombian President Clvaro Uribe withdrew the authorization to his Venezuelan counterpart, Hugo ChC!vez, to continue mediating for a humanitarian accord between the Colombian government and the FARC guerrillas (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) that might allow the release of detainees and prisoners of war. World consternation was immediate, particularly from the French government, which identified ChC!vez as "the best chance" to achieve that objective. The alternative offered by the government in BogotC! is the same that has provided no solution in five years: a military approach. Feeling scorned and "betrayed", ChC!vez on Nov. 25 decided to freeze relations with Colombia. Speaking publicly, the Venezuelan president compared Uribe and his government with Gen. Francisco de Paula Santander, one of the first leaders of Colombia after that country's independence from Spain. "They are [like] Santander, who ordered the assassination of BolC-var," ChC!vez said. Uribe, without naming ChC!vez, said that the Venezuelan president was manipulating history because Santander "gave us the example of adherence to the law." By permission of the Spanish publishers Foca-InvestigaciC3n and the Venezuelan publishing foundation El Perro y la Rana, we publish this excerpt from the soon-to-be-published book "History of State Terrorism in Colombia," by Hernando Calvo Ospina, a Colombian journalist and writer who lives in France. It is a brief demonstration that President ChC!vez is absolutely right. And that Uribe defends those who resemble Uribe. The roots of intolerance The official history says Francisco de Paula Santander was Colombia's "man of laws." What history doesn't say is that he could bear the title of first major example of betrayal and political intransigence among the Colombian elite. Santander viewed SimC3n BolC-var's assassination as the only possibility of dismembering the Grand Colombia, formed by Venezuela, Ecuador and Colombia. His hunger for power and the nascent homegrown oligarchy that supported him led him to plan several attempts on the Liberator's life. The main one occurred Sept. 25, 1828, in BogotC!. Santander's minions raided the Presidential Palace, murdering some of the guards and subduing the rest. It was midnight. Believing themselves safe, they began to shout insults as they ran to BolC-var's bedroom. One of the conspirators said: "A beautiful lady holding a sword barred our path and, with an admirable presence of mind and in very courteous tones, asked what did we want." The "lady," who had been sleeping with the infirm Liberator, had awakened him and helped him to dress so he could escape through a window. She then faced down the assassins, wearing only a sleeping gown. The men took away her sword and pushed her to the ground; one of them kicked her on the head. The following day, when news of the raid spread, the people took to the streets, hailing BolC-var and demanding the execution of Santander and the others. The Liberator's wish was that the culprits be pardoned, but a tribunal handed down the sentences. Santander was sentenced to death, but BolC-var commuted the sentence and sent Santander into exile. "My generosity defends him," BolC-var said. In early 1830, the French envoy in BogotC! visited the Liberator. Seeing the expression of surprise on the diplomat's face, BolC-var confided that his illness and extreme loss of weight, "with my legs swimming in my broad flannel trousers" were caused by the suffering inflicted by his "compatriots who could not stab me to death and now try to assassinate me morally with their ingratitude and slander. After I'm gone, those demagogues will devour each other, like wolves, and the building that I constructed with superhuman efforts will collapse." BolC-var was only 47 years old but he looked like a 60-year-old man. Although short of stature, he had been indomitable for more than a quarter century, fighting on horseback to free five nations, under the ideals of Latin American unity. Only the political and economic interests of the elite sent him on the path of collapse. [...] The "lady" mentioned by one of the plotters was named Manuela SC!enz. Official history books, when they name her, describe her simply as BolC-var's lover. When one reads some of the "educational" manuals, one is left with the sensation that she was "a devourer" of men. A whore. Born in Quito, Manuelita began to confront "society" at the age of 12, when she took to the streets with the people in her hometown who demanded emancipation from Spain in 1809. At an early age, she married a wealthy English trader. They traveled to Lima, where she spent some time attending conspiratorial political meetings, something very unusual among women at the time. In 1821, she participated in the uprising and received the highest award given to patriots: Lady of the Order of the Sun. The following year, she returned to Ecuador and was present on the day that BolC-var entered the capital in triumph, after the Battle of Pichincha. They met at a gala and Manuelita triggered a new "social" scandal: she decided to abandon her husband and join the Liberator. In October 1823, at the request of the top officers, she was brought into BolC-var's general staff. Another scandal: a woman in uniform, bearing the rank of colonel. A unique instance in the quest for liberation. At the Battle of Ayacucho in 1824, when Spain was about to be expelled from South America, Manuelita fought shoulder to shoulder with the brave lancers. From that time on, she was referred to by the troops as "the Liberatress." In Colombia, she had to deal with the hard core of the conspirators against BolC-var, who contemptuously called "the Manuela woman." The assassination attempt against the Liberator on Sept. 25 was the third one she had saved him from. The anger against her was shown in the slander hurled at her, particularly attacks on her dignity. When a very ill BolC-var resigned the presidency and left to meet death, the attacks against Manuelita took impetus. Posters insulting her appeared in many places in BogotC!. She counterattacked, distributing a leaflet that exposed the inefficacy of the leaders and revealed their secrets. Her action was branded as "provocative and seditious" and she was sent to jail for several days, a treatment never before meted to a woman, particularly a woman of her stature. After BolC-var's death, Santander returned to Colombia like a hero. He regained all his posts and was even named president. On Jan. 1, 1834, he signed a decree that sent Manuelita into exile. She left for Jamaica and from there went to Ecuador, but the government of her native country refused her entry. The "Liberatress of the Andes" had no choice but to seek refuge in a town on the Peruvian coast, where she made a living as a tobacconist. She died in poverty, of diphtheria, in 1856.(*) (*) On May 24, 2007, President Rafael Correa of Ecuador promoted her posthumously to General of the Republic. * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================