Former AUC chief vows to cooperate with Colombia’s war crimes system

The former leader of Colombia’s state-loyal paramilitary groups said Thursday he will take part in his country’s transitional justice system, increasing pressure on Congress.

Former AUC chief Salvatore Mancuso is currently in prison in the United States on drug trafficking charges and convicted of more than 500 crimes in Colombia that left more than 5,000 victims.

While testifying against jailed Senator Martin Emilio Morales (U Party), Mancuso said he would also cooperate with the transitional justice system that is part of a peace process with the FARC, the AUC’s demobilized arch enemy.


Salvatore Mancuso

Macuso’s now-defunct organization was formed in 1997 to unite multiple regional anti-guerrilla groups and soon became one of the primary victimizers in Colombia’s armed conflict.

Other paramilitary commanders had already vowed to cooperate with the justice system that has Congress up the wall.


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More than 60 former congressmen and seven governors have already been imprisoned for their ties to the AUC.

Companies from both Colombia and abroad have been sentenced for financially supporting the group determined a terrorist group by the United States in 2002.

Paramilitary participation in the justice system could lead to more indictments of politicians or the reopening of closed investigations.

The AUC coerced communities throughout Colombia to elect politicians who were loyal to the paramilitaries’ anti-communist cause in elections, particularly those of 2002 and 2006.


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Salvatore Mancuso

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