Sign in | Register View Today's Print Edition · Buy Photos · Place an Ad · Subscription Rates · Contact Us · About Us
Texarkana Gazette Buildings Header Art
Browse Categories  (Add your business to the Texarkana Business Directory)
71
121

Freed U.S. hostages denounce rebels

FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas—Among the smiles and hugs shared by three American hostages freed last week from rebels in Colombia and their families, one of the men on Monday angrily denounced their captors as “terrorists with a capital ’T.”’

Marc Gonsalves said the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which held him and two other U.S. military contractors in captivity for more than five years, refuses to acknowledge human rights and rejects democracy. He said they use revolution as a justification for criminal activity.

“I want to send a message to the FARC,” Gonsalves said. “FARC, you guys are terrorists. You deny that you are, you say with words that you’re not terrorists, but your words don’t have any value. Don’t tell us that you’re not terrorists, show us that you’re not terrorists.” Gonsalves made the remarks at a ceremony welcoming him and two other U.S. military contractors — Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell — home after their time in captivity. The men who are undergoing a voluntary “reintegration process” did not take questions.

“Almost 5 1/2 years ago we fell off the edge of the earth. ... We are doing well but we cannot forget those we left behind in captivity,” Howes said.

Family members, some wiping tears, also expressed their gratitude for their loved ones’ rescue.

Gonsalves, who was much thinner than he seemed in a pre-captivity picture on display at the ceremony, said FARC was punishing others because the three men and former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt were rescued.

Gonsalves said a hostage with a chain around his neck would be forced to march while carrying a heavy backpack and a guerrilla armed with an automatic weapon held the other end of the chain “like a dog.”

“They say that they want equality, they say that they just want to make Colombia a better place,” Gonsalves said. “But that’s all a lie.” Betancourt on Monday advised President Alvaro Uribe of Colombia to tone down the “radical, extremist language of hate” toward her former captors.

The men had been held by FARC since their drug-surveillance plane went down in the jungle in February 2003. They were rescued when Colombian spies tricked leftist rebels into handing them over. Eleven Colombian police and soldiers also were released.

The men, employees of a Northrop Grumman Corp. subsidiary, arrived in the U.S. late Wednesday and were taken by helicopter to Fort Sam Houston’s Brooke Army Medical Center, where they have been treated.

The three men, who spoke in an auditorium adorned with large yellow ribbons and an American flag, thanked the Colombian military, the U.S. government, Northrop Grumman and their families.

“They are the reason I’m alive and standing right here with all of you today,” Stansell said of his family. Stansell provided one of the lighter moments when, from the podium, he asked Florida Gov. Charlie Crist for a new driver’s license so he could get home.

The men gave thumbs-up and waved as they got a lengthy standing ovation from uniformed military in the audience.

“It’s a pleasure to be in the USA,” Howes said.





Local News Archive Calendar
December, 2008
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
 1     
       
       
       
     
Sponsor Advertisements
127
Featured Business
Featured Business
The Pool Hut

The Pool Hut
4103 Kramer Lane Bldg. A Ste. 104
Texarkana, TX 75501
903-831-5330
Visit Website / View Map

Add your business with a Platinum Directory Package
 
 
Vocational College Schools | Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Place an Ad | Links | Dropbox

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

visitors since April 26th, 2007

2008 (c) Copyright Texarkana Gazette

Web design by: Joe Regan
Owner of: WebProJoe.com Web Design Company