12:02 pm By Maegan La Mala · Colombia · 8 Comments
11 Jul 2010Edited to add on July 15, 2010: On Tuesday, July 13 of this week, Betancourt retracted the claim discussed below.
Remember Ingrid Betancourt? The once presidential candidate in Colombia turned FARC prisoner, turned rescued mujer?
Two years after her liberation from the jungles of Colombia, there are some who are calling Betancourt malagradecida, ungrateful, for going after the Colombian government for monetary damages to compensate for emotional distress and income lost while she was a FARC hostage. Her attorneys say that the Colombian government failed to provide Betancourt
The then President of Colombia, Pastrana, could have airlifted the then presidential candidate in 2002 to the FARC territory, but he chose not to, allegedly because of recently canceled peace talks and National troop movement.
“The defence ministry is surprised and upset by the request, all the more due to the effort and zeal with which our public forces planned and executed the rescue,” the ministry said in a statement on Friday.
“Men and women of the armed forces risked their lives while seeking the liberty of the hostages in an operation that Ingrid Betancourt herself called ‘perfect’.”
9:54 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Chismes|Colombia|Latin America · 1 Comment
16 Mar 2009
The unenthusiatic greeting former FARC hostage Ingrid Betancourt gave her husband upon being released from captivity last year after 6 years was the subject of a lot of whispering about what might become of her marriage. It appears those speculations were warranted, as Sunday the Colombian magazine Semana announced that Betancourt has filed for divorce from husband Juan Carlos Lecompte:
Betancourt wants a divorce from publicist Juan Carlos Lecompte and reportedly argued that they had been ‘bodily separated’ for more than six years, well beyond the two years that are required by Colombian law as sufficient cause for divorce.
Semana noted that Lecompte’s lawyers rejected the demand and argued that such a separation was not voluntary, but was forced by the kidnapping of the former presidential candidate – who has both Colombian and French citizenship – by the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
According to Monsters and Critics, Lecompte himself is planning to file for divorce, citing that Betancourt was unfaithful to him during her captivity, maintaining a relationship with fellow hostage Luis Eladio Perez.
Many saw this coming, as Betancourt has been spotted in the company of another man, who some say is her new boyfriend. Other media outlets say that Betancourt isn’t with a new boyfriend, but with Luis Eladio Perez, with whom she is “rebuilding her life”. In any case, it looks like it didn’t take her too long to adapt to regular life after 6 years of captivity.
Via / Monsters and Critics
10:47 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Politics|Venezuela · Comments Off
21 Dec 2008
On Al Punto with Jorge Ramos this morning on Univision, there was an interview with former FARC hostage and one time Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt. Five months after her release, Betancourt said the FARC was struggling to survive in Colombia and that there have been orders to recapture her, which is why she lives in Paris, France, where she is also a citizen.
2:53 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia · Comments Off
5 Dec 2008
From the AP we get an update on Ingrid Betancourt, the former Colombian politician, FARC captive and current anti-kidnapping advocate. It’s news that really makes me very sad:
Ingrid Betancourt told The Associated Press that she is constantly revisiting in her mind her fateful February 2002 decision to rush recklessly into rebel-controlled territory unprotected — a move that led to her abduction and six years of captivity in Colombia’s jungle.
Now, she doesn’t appear in public without a detailed security plan. Death threats — which she wouldn’t describe — and safety concerns prevented her from joining in marches held against kidnapping Friday across Colombia.
As a woman, seeing another woman in such pain and fear is really a horrible thing to witness–even worse is seeing how the violence and trauma she’s been subjected to seem to have ‘taught her a lesson’ (aka knocked her down a peg or two, shown her who’s boss, etc). She understands now, what happens to uppity women who have the audacity to think that they have unrestricted free movement. They are raped, almost starved to death and denied access to their family for years.
Don’t get me wrong–I am not saying that Betancourt should ignore her security detail and go running around the country again. I myself would do the same thing she is now doing, and never would’ve gone into the places she insisted on going into. But I would’ve made my choices based on the same fear that’s she’s now dealing with, not because I was ‘smart.’
And it makes me sad to see how women who don’t carry a permanent fear of physical retribution in their souls are punished until they do.
8:53 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Politics|Women · Comments Off
9 Sep 2008
During Ingrid Betancourt’s 4 day visit in Rome, she met with the pope, and she made what some would call stunning statements as to the role her once captors, the FARC, should play in Colombia.
Addressing her kidnappers directly, she said: “After almost seven years, I can say I know you, I know your organisation, your ideas, your objectives.” The world, she said, is inviting them to open their hearts “to something more than political and military calculations,” and to “make room for peace in your minds.”And peace can come only “through the way of democracy, mutual respect and law,” she said. She asked the Colombian government to recognise the political role of the FARC, “knowing that we are different, and have different ideas.”
Via / IPS and Reader Patrick Mac Manus
3:21 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Uncategorized · Comments Off
3 Sep 2008I was kinda surprised to read today how much meeting the Pope meant to Ingrid Betancourt. I didn’t realize many of us Catholics/ex-Catholics still felt any serious emotional connection the Pope, most Catholics I know are lovers of La Virgin and occasionally remember some ancient rule (like eating fish on Friday’s) as way to show a seasonal respect to La Virgin.
I can see Betancourt’s point though, that hearing a trusted voice after being held captive for years has a way of being inspirational.
“It’s hard to explain the psychological effect this has on a prisoner, what it meant to know we hadn’t been forgotten at a time when we thought we didn’t exist,” Betancourt said. “The voice of the Holy Father was like a light.”
Betancourt said she told the pope about her distress for the hundreds of hostages FARC still holds and her concern for Colombia’s future after decades of civil war.
“The pope is pained by the suffering of the prisoners,” she said. “I know his prayers are also dedicated to obtaining the freedom of all the prisoners and peace in my country.”
via/Boston.com
The BBC News is reporting that Ingrid Betancourt’s health is fine, in spite of six years of brutal captivity. Again, as before, the article seems to hint around at the possibility of sexual violence. When asked about the possibility that the Colombian government may have paid a ransom to free the captors, Betancourt’s responded,
If it were true, so much the better. Why not?” she said. “I suffered terribly.”She described one of her captors, who she called Enrique, as being a man “of special cruelty”.
Although the article doesn’t specifically say, “she was raped,” the fact that all the articles I read about Betancourt keep hinting at some dark repressive form of abuse (as if being held in the jungle against your will for six years isn’t bad enough) is disturbing to me.
9:43 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Colombia|Music|Politics · Comments Off
17 Jul 2008
Recently rescued from the FARC, former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt shows no signs of a promised slowdown as she hangs with fellow Colombiana, Shakira. Apparently Ingrid is using Shaki’s song “Hero” for a political ad aimed at the FARC.
Hey guerrillas, I’m Ingrid Betancourt. I want you to recover your liberty like I have. I’m waiting for you!
Via / Blogamole
5:11 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia|france|Politics · Comments Off
14 Jul 2008
Former Colombian presidential candidate and recently released FARC hostage, Ingrid Betancourt, was appointed a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour by French President Nicolas Sarkozy today, Bastille Day.
Betancourt, who has both Colombian and French citizenship, said in an interview aired yesterday on Univision, on Al Punto with Jorge Ramos, that she thought there were other ways to serve the Colombian people besides as president and that seeking the presidency was not a priority.
She also asked that people give her the time and space to sort through all that has happened. This is clearly a response to the press’s insistence on hearing details as to what happened to her during her six year experience as a FARC hostage in the Colombian jungle.
Via / BBC, AL Punto con Jorge Ramos (Univision)
10:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia|Politics · Comments Off
3 Jul 2008Newly liberated former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt describes the Colombian military operation that freed her. But also note her politician side coming out. She throws flowers at the Colombian military saying that they will lead Colombia to peace (an army leading a country to peace?) and also how she praises the Israeli military.
Other news reports show Betancourt thanking President Alvaro Uribe (who was once her rival and whom she linked to paramilitaries during her own campaign). She also thanks Latin American Presidents like Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Ecuador’s Rafael Correa, but said that they need to respect Colombian democracy.
Later today, Betancourt will be reunited with her children.
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