FARC leader removed from reintegration camp over security concerns

One of the most feared former FARC commanders has been forced to leave his integration camp because of fears for his security, according to Colombia’s top peace official.

Henry Castellanos, a.k.a. “Romaña,” had been leading a reintegration camp in Tumaco, Nariño, where all kinds of illegal armed groups are vying for abandoned drug routes once protected by the FARC.



Colombia’s High Commissioner for Peace, Rodrigo Rivera, told press that the former Eastern Bloc commander had been moved to an undisclosed location.

The National Police commander, General Jorge Nieto, dissident FARC members have threatened to assassinate Castellanos.

Dozens of community leaders and several demobilized guerrillas have been assassinated since the FARC entered a peace process signed a year ago on Friday.


Peace Commissioner Rodrigo Rivera

The Nariño province, where Castellanos led the reintegration hundreds of former fighters, has seen extreme violence in the aftermath of the 50-year armed conflict between the FARC and the state.

Hundreds of dissidents FARC members are fighting a turf war with other illegal armed groups and security forces over control in the coca-rich province, and the port town Tumaco in particular.

According to Rivera, the illegal armed groups are targeting coca farmers and demobilized guerrillas to protect drug trafficking profits.


Peace Commissioner Rodrigo Rivera

The Colombian government has come under international pressure for failing to assume control over former FARC territories like the west of Nariño.


Active illegal armed groups in Nariño


Castellanos’s alleged war crime record contains hundreds of murders of the FARC’s former “kidnapping czar.”

Local press have highlighted the former guerrilla commander’s success in setting up farming projects where former guerrillas collectively try to reintegrate into Colombian society.

Castellanos’s displacement is a major blow for the reintegration program that has shown significant failures, according to United Nations observers.

The peace process around the reintegration efforts seeks to end more than half a century of armed conflict between the former guerrilla group and the state.

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