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Colombian rebels said stepping up attacks ( 2003-09-21 14:48) (Agencies)
Rebels are stepping up attacks in northern Colombia to distract troops who are searching for eight foreign backpackers kidnapped in the snowcapped mountains of Sierra Nevada, Colombia's president said Saturday.
The Colombian armed forces are conducting a massive search operation for four Israelis, two Britons, a German and a Spaniard who were seized Sept. 12 from rustic cabins in the archaeological ruins of Ciudad Perdida, or the Lost City. Since Friday, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, has been accused of bombing a train carrying coal and blowing up a gas pipeline and two electrical towers in the region, according to the army. "The intelligence reports we have indicate that commanders of the FARC have given militants orders to carry out attacks to divert the pressure of the security forces in the Sierra Nevada," President Alvaro Uribe told reporters. The FARC, which is blamed for the majority of kidnappings in Colombia, denied abducting the foreigners. A right-wing paramilitary group operating in the Sierra Nevada mountains also said its troops were not involved. Authorities said a smaller rebel group, the National Liberation Army, or ELN, could be responsible. The ELN hasn't commented on the abduction. "There are some indications that it could be the ELN, but we are not entirely sure," Gen. Carlos Alberto Ospina, the commander of the army, told reporters Saturday. The paramilitary group blamed both rebel groups for the abduction, while the FARC accused the Colombian army of staging the whole affair so that authorities could take credit for an eventual rescue. Hundreds of troops and Black Hawk helicopters are reportedly hunting for the hostages.
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