Colombian rebel chief dies after four decades of war
By Patrick Markey
BOGOTA (Reuters) - Manuel Marulanda, the founder and top commander of Colombia's main left-wing rebel army, has died of a heart attack after more than four decades fighting a fierce guerrilla war, his rebel group said.
Nicknamed "Sureshot" by his rebel comrades, Marulanda organized the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, as a communist-inspired army in 1964, and his death is the heaviest setback in its history.
Colombia's military said on Saturday that intelligence sources showed Marulanda died in late March, and the news was confirmed by rebel commander Timoleon Jimenez in a video played on Venezuelan-based television channel Telesur on Sunday.
"Our maximum leader, Manuel Marulanda Velez, died of a heart attack on March 26... in the arms of his companion," Jimenez said, dressed in combat fatigues and standing before a Colombian flag in an unknown location.
Alfonso Cano, already a member of its seven-man leadership, will replace Marulanda as its chief, the FARC said. Cano, 59, is known as a more of a political leader than a military strategist and entered the FARC as a student activist.
Born into a peasant family, Marulanda rose from a humble businessman who once sold candy to become the commander of the FARC as it evolved from a ragtag army into Latin America's largest and oldest-surviving insurgency.
Marulanda, whose real name was Pedro Antonio Marin, was one of Colombia's most hunted men. He was reclusive and was last seen in public more than five years ago, in combat fatigues and with his trademark sweat towel slung over his shoulder.
Under his command, the FARC grew into a 17,000-member force controlling large parts of the country. Continued...







