BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - A satchel of letters carried out of the jungle by two women freed by Colombian rebels details the heart-wrenching suffering and depredation of the hostages whom they left behind.
The letters from eight captive politicians, police officers and soldiers describe being chained by the neck and suffering from malaria, tropical parasites, heart ailments and diarrhea so severe that one captive couldn’t walk.
The testimony of Lt. Col. Luis Mendieta — his first communication to his family in five years — is among the most eloquent and painful in the letters given by the captives to Clara Rojas and Consuelo Gonzalez in a tearful parting after the rebels freed the two women.
In a Dec. 21 letter, Col. Mendieta wrote that he is frequently tethered with two fellow captives by chains around their necks. He describes surviving two bouts of malaria and chronic chest pains and being so stricken by tropical ailments that he had to crawl on his hands and knees for about five weeks.
“I had to drag myself through the mud to relieve myself, with only my arms because I couldn’t stand up,” wrote Col. Mendieta, the highest-ranking Colombian security officer still held.
In four pages of dense handwriting, Col. Mendieta, 50, said he had to be carried on a makeshift stretcher from camp to camp during the ordeal and lost all his meager possessions.
When he finally was able to walk again, “there was a misunderstanding in the group and someone ordered chains placed around my neck again, tethering me to a stick when I had just begun my convalescence.”
His wife, Maria Teresa Mendieta, has done her utmost to publicize the letter’s contents despite the pain caused by constantly reading it aloud.
“I’ve been crying so much, my eyes are inflamed,” she told the Associated Press last week in her Bogota apartment.
In addition to the letter describing his condition, Col. Mendieta sent a separate “love letter” that she would not share as well as missives to each of his two children.
He also sent five “proof-of-life” instant photos, including one showing him in a badly soiled blue tracksuit top with a darker mismatched bottom.
Mrs. Mendieta said she has managed her husband’s nine-year absence with the help of psychotherapy and anti-anxiety medication.
“This is the only country in the world where this many people have been held hostage for so long,” she said.
Colombia estimates that the rebels still hold 750 hostages in small groups in far-flung jungle hideaways.
“They need to be freed now,” said the Mendietas’ 21-year-old daughter, Jenny.
Among the hostages often chained to Col. Mendieta is former state Gov. Alan Jara, who was kidnapped in July 2001. His letter says he suffers chronic headaches because of a parasite that apparently has infected his brain, Miss Mendieta said.
“He could die at any moment,” she said.
U.S. Ambassador William Brownfield described the revelations as “authentically repugnant.”
Col. Mendieta was a police commander when guerrillas of the Marxist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, overran his city on Nov. 1, 1998. Most people seized with him were freed in the rebels’ last major hostage release, of 300 police and soldiers in 2001.
The eight persons held with Miss Rojas and Mrs. Gonzalez are among 44 hostages, including three U.S. military contractors and former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, whom the rebels hope to swap for hundreds of jailed comrades.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez brokered the women’s Jan. 10 release, and relatives of those still surrounded by barbed wire in jungle prisons pray he can help free the others.
Former Congressman Jorge Gechem wrote his wife that he had a serious heart condition and could no longer walk because of an injured back.
He asked whether Fidel Castro might get him transferred to a Cuban hospital.
“If I recover immediately, I could be moved to a jail in Havana as a political prisoner,” he said. “I want to keeping living … but my physical resistance is flagging.”
Mr. Gechem was seized in February 2002 when the FARC hijacked his commercial flight, an attack that prompted Andres Pastrana, the president at the time, to dissolve a Switzerland-sized safe haven that he had created to facilitate peace talks.
The incident is one of many reasons President Alvaro Uribe has rejected the rebels’ demand for another demilitarized zone.
“After nine, eight and seven years of captivity, we’ve reached the conclusion that kidnapping’s suffering knows no limits,” Col. Mendieta wrote to Caracol Radio, which broadcasts messages to the hostages every Sunday morning.
“But it’s not the physical pain that wounds us, not the chains that we wear around our necks that torment us, nor the incessant ailments that afflict us. It’s the mental agony caused by the irrationality of all this. It’s the anger produced by the perversity of the bad and the indifference of the good.”
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