BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombia’s human rights ombudswoman said Saturday that six children were killed in a controversial airstrike against a rebel group in the country’s south this week, as the administration of President Gustavo Petro steps up efforts to regain control of rural areas in Guaviare province.
In a statement, ombudswoman Iris Marin said the minors killed in the strike against the FARC-EMC rebel group had been forcibly recruited and were being used as human shields.
Marin called on the Colombian government and rebel groups to respect international humanitarian law.
“No child or teenager who has been recruited should be affected by military operations,” Marin said. “The armed forces must adopt precautions to protect children who have been forced to take part in hostilities.”
Earlier this week, Colombian Defense Minister Pedro Sanchez blamed criminal groups for putting children in danger and told journalists that, in his view, “whoever gets involved in hostilities loses protection, without distinction.”
The death of children in military strikes is a sensitive topic in Colombia, where a former defense minister resigned in 2019 after it was found that the government covered up the deaths of eight children during an airstrike in Caqueta province.
According to Colombia’s military, at least 19 fighters were killed in the strike Tuesday in Guaviare, including the six minors.
Petro said Saturday that he had decided to order the airstrike because a column of rebel fighters was advancing toward a position from where they could ambush a smaller group of Colombian troops.
“The death of any person is regrettable, and especially that of minors,” Petro wrote on X. “I took a risk to save the lives” of soldiers.
Petro suspended airstrikes against criminal groups shortly after he came into office three years ago, in order to reduce the possibilities of killing children. The left-wing leader had accused previous governments of war crimes when it was found that minors died in airstrikes against rebel groups.
But airstrikes against Colombian rebels resumed last year, as the Petro administration struggles to contain the expansion of groups that are fighting to take over territory abandoned by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the guerrilla group that made peace with the Colombian government in 2016.
Petro is an outspoken critic of the Trump administration’s strikes on alleged drug traffickers in the Caribbean, which he and other critics have described as extrajudicial executions.
On Friday he argued that his government’s airstrikes against rebels groups are different.
“Those who are falling in the bombardments of Colombian forces have machine guns, explosives, and have declared themselves members of an armed group,” Petro wrote on X. “They are trying to eliminate government forces and civilians with their lethal weapons.”
Rueda writes for the Associated Press.
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