Colombia's newest troops don't have to leave home
Some 5,000 troops eagerly enlist in a program that lets them serve in own villages.
By Rachel Van Dongen | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
SAN FRANCISCO DE SALES, COLOMBIA - Like many of this country's forgotten
villages, this sleepy hamlet never had a military
presence.
That changed six weeks ago when 36 soldiers wearing fatigues and wielding Galil rifles marched into the town square.
But it wasn't an occupation. It was a homecoming.
These young men, ranging in age from 18 to 28, were returning to their
hometown from three months of basic training in the capital, Bogotá.
They were greeted with anthems and white banners. Schools closed, and the
mayor declared the day a civic holiday.
Their mission: to protect their 12,000 neighbors and their families from the creeping presence of leftist guerrilla forces.
These sons of San Francisco are part of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe
Vélez's newest weapon in the war on terror - recruits of a
fledgling program called soldados campesinos, or peasant soldiers.
In order to strengthen the armed forces as quickly as possible, Mr. Uribe
has offered Colombia's young men a new way to serve a 18-month
mandatory military service. Instead of being stationed in far-flung provinces,
where the population regards them suspiciously, the peasant-
soldier program allows troops to return to their home villages. The aim
is to train more than 15,000 soldiers this year and dispatch them to
450 of 1,098 municipalities over the next six months. More than 150 of
Colombia's towns have never had military presence.
The program was announced last fall, and soldiers just began arriving in
the nation's war- ravaged villages last month. Some 5,000 eager
recruits have already enlisted and the government hopes that being with
their families is enough to keep young men from dodging military
service.
"This is a very special opportunity to be close to my family ... to feel
their warmth," says Johan Murillo, who joined the program, along with
his younger brother. "We also receive a lot of cooperation from the population."
The troops get three months' training, and $17 a month in pay, although
room and board is provided. They have just begun arriving in
Colombia's war-ravaged villages and so far, there have been no major conflicts
or casualties.
According to Col. Ruben Alzate, who will train 200 peasant soldiers at
the Rincón Quiñones barracks in Bogotá this year,
the soldiers'
special training is in urban warfare tactics.
"In three months, they are ready," Alzate says.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the Army's main foe,
has no direct presence in San Francisco. But Alzate explains
that the village is a "strategic" point in neutralizing the guerrillas
should they try and advance toward the capital, an hour and a half west.
Any intelligence gathered in the area would help the Army better plan its
offensive operations.
On a daily basis, the troops' main tasks include patrolling the town square,
searching cars entering and exiting the village, interacting with
the population, and aiding in civic education and cleaning campaigns. According
to the platoon's commander, Sgt. Mena Córdoba Edison,
common crime, such as theft of cattle and cars, has decreased 80 percent
since the troops arrived.
Social workers
Sergeant Córdoba says the role of his troops is as much social as it is in defense of the community.
"The people are always going to be with them," Córdoba commented. "They are sons of the village."
Indeed, in contrast to other Colombian towns closer to the front lines,
people did not seem afraid to greet the soldiers patrolling the main
plaza with guns slung over their shoulders. On one recent morning, residents
shook hands with Córdoba and took him aside to whisper in
hushed tones. Such a scene would be unimaginable in other villages where
police and soldiers live behind fortified bunkers, afraid to venture
as far as the main square.
"It has bettered the peace," says Mayor Nelson Arístizabal, who
has been under a FARC death threat since last June and had only seven
policemen for protection. "They know the land. They know the people."
The people have more "desire to live," Arístizabal says. "They give us affection."
The soldiers live in a blue-painted barracks, a former private farm, down
a gravel path minutes from the town square. With a shaded gazebo,
mango and orange trees, bunk beds, and a kitchen where they cook their
own food, it resembles something of sleep-away camp with
Córdoba as the camp counselor. Every four days, the soldiers take
turns sleeping at home.
Uribe's government hopes that the peasant soldiers will form a bond with
their home community, giving the Army better intelligence about
rebel movements. The president also argues that with the ability to stay
near home, young recruits will now choose to join the Army
instead of the FARC or right-wing paramilitaries.
But some human rights groups say the young troops aren't given sufficient
training - regular troops receive an average of four months'
training, continued wherever they are stationed. They also contend that
the peasants, along with their families, make easy military targets.
Risky business?
"They are running a lot of risks," says Daniel Garcia Peña, head
of the pro-peace group, Planeta Paz. Mr. Peña says that by sleeping
in
their homes and interacting with their families and their friends, the
soldiers are "involving the civilian population in a more direct manner"
in
the war.
But so far, the plan seems to be working in San Francisco, where the troops,
and the people they serve, are content. "One always walks
with morale. It is for your family," explains Johan Murillo, who, echoing
other recruits, says one of the primary reasons he enlisted was to
have the ability to "protect" his family.
In exchange, Murillo adds, "It is almost a responsibility for them to protect
us" by supplying information. Though he hasn't confronted the
guerrillas head-on, Murillo says he must be ready for whatever comes his
way. "You cannot trust. You have to take care of yourself. You
can't allow yourself to leave your routine."