- Manuel Marulanda
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For the town, see Marulanda, Caldas.
Pedro Antonio Marín Nickname "Manuel Marulanda Vélez"
"Tirofijo"Born May 13, 1930
Génova, Quindío
ColombiaDied March 26, 2008 (aged 77)
Edificio Marbella, Bogota[1]Allegiance Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
CommunismRank Secretariat member, Chief of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia Pedro Antonio Marín Marín (May 13, 1930 [disputed][2] - March 26, 2008), known by his "nom de guerre" Manuel Marulanda Vélez, was the main leader of the FARC-EP ("Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia - Ejército del Pueblo"). Marulanda was born in a coffee-growing region of west-central Colombia in the Quindío Department, to a peasant family politically aligned with the Liberal Party during conflicts in the 1940s and 1950s.
Marulanda was nicknamed "Tirofijo" (Spanish: Surefire or Sureshot) by his comrades, apparently because of a reputed ability to accurately aim firearms.[citation needed]
Marulanda himself changed his political and ideological inclinations to the Communist Party (PCC) during "La Violencia" (roughly 1948 to 1958) that followed the assassination of the Liberal Party's leader Jorge Eliécer Gaitán.
In March 2006, Alberto Gonzales, the Attorney General of the United States, announced in conjunction with Drug Enforcement Administration and United States Department of Justice officials that the US State Department had placed a $5 million dollar reward on Tirofijo's head, or for information leading to his capture.[3] But 'Marulanda' was never apprehended, and died of a heart attack on March 26, 2008. He was replaced as commander-in-chief by 'Alfonso Cano'.[4]
Contents
Early armed activities
Main article: Marquetalia RepublicMarulanda and members of his family, like many Liberal peasants, rose up in arms not long after they heard the news about the death of Jorge Eliecer Gaitan. Initially they were defending themselves from members of the rival Conservative Party and of local police forces.
Eventually, Marulanda split with some of his relatives and became part of a column of guerrilla fighters that came under the influence of the Communist Party of Colombia, which developed a more proactive role in the fighting, executing more raids and offensive operations. He took on the name "Manuel Marulanda" in honor of a murdered union leader. Marulanda eventually met and befriended Luis Morantes, also known as Jacobo Arenas, a PCC political cadre sent to the rural areas by the central party structure.
Members of this group later settled in an area known as Marquetalia towards the end of "La Violencia", keeping their weapons. They distrusted the Colombian Army and government even after a 1953 coup led by General Gustavo Rojas against Conservative president Laureano Gómez. Rojas had offered an amnesty that was accepted by most Liberal irregular fighters nationwide, but reputedly the murder of a few demobilized individuals made Marulanda, his rural comrades and his PCC superiors in the cities uneasy.
After the fall of Rojas in 1957 and the signing of the National Front agreement in 1958 between Colombia's two main parties, self-sufficient armed enclaves, such as the so-called "independent republics" and in particular a supposed "Marquetalia Republic", were considered dangerous by the new government. Pressure from Conservative members of Congress and from the United States led to a Colombian Army attack on Marquetalia, which was eventually overrun during what was termed "Operation Marquetalia" in May 1964.
Formation of the FARC
The Colombian Army's attack was mostly ineffective, though it did scatter the guerrillas, and most of the survivors reunited elsewhere and later became part of the "Bloque Sur" (Southern Bloc) guerrilla group in 27 May 1964, a precursor to the official foundation of the FARC in 1966. Marulanda and Jacobo Arenas soon established themselves as the main leaders of the new guerrilla group.
Death
Marulanda was never captured or killed, he died of natural causes.
Marulanda died of a heart attack on March 26, 2008. The news was first brought by Colombian magazine Revista Semana on May 24, 2008 that cited Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos saying Marulanda died. The minister claimed he had learned this from a reliable informant within FARC. He also told the magazine that three bombing raids had targeted the rebel chief around the date in question.[5][6] A press statement released by the Colombian Ministry of Defense on May 24 stated that Marulanda died on March 26, 2008 at 18:30 hours (UTC 13:30).[7] On May 25 in a video released to channel teleSUR, Timoleón Jiménez, aka Timochenko, another member of the Central High Command of the FARC, confirmed the death as heart failure.[4][8]
See also
- The World's 10 Most Wanted
References
- ^ Cronica Digital - Farc Confirma Muerte De Marulanda[dead link]
- ^ (Spanish) El Mundo: El viajo guerrillero y su delfin
- ^ http://www.state.gov/p/inl/narc/rewards/63840.htm : US Department of State - Rewards
- ^ a b "FARC confirm death of ‘Manuel Marulanda’". Colombia Reports. May 25, 2008. http://colombiareports.com/2008/05/25/farc-admits-death-of-manuel-marandula/.
- ^ Articulo OnLine "Tirofijo está muerto"
- ^ "‘Manuel Marulanda’ is dead, says Minister of Defense". Colombia Reports. May 24, 2008. http://colombiareports.com/2008/05/24/manuel-marulanda-is-dead-says-minister-of-defense/.
- ^ "Army confirms death ‘Manuel Marulanda’". Colombia Reports. May 24, 2008. http://colombiareports.com/2008/05/24/army-confirms-death-manuel-marandula/.
- ^ "‘Las FARC confirman la muerte de Manuel Marulanda". Noticias 24. May 25, 2008. http://www.noticias24.com/actualidad/?p=14563/.
- Diario de la resistencia de Marquetalia, Jacobo Arenas, Ediciones Abejón Mono, 1972 (Espanol)
External links
- Colombia's Rebel Patriarch Is Dead by Tim Padgett, Time Magazine, May 25, 2008
- Documentary: 50 years of Guerrilla
- Manuel Marulanda, Cuadernos de Campaňa (1953)
FARC-EP Organization Secretariat Timoleón Jiménez • Iván Márquez • Joaquín Gómez • Mauricio Jaramillo • Pablo Catatumbo • Pastor Alape
(Substitutes in line: Bertulfo Álvarez)Other notable personnel Manuel Marulanda Vélez (founder) † • Jacobo Arenas (founder) † • Simón Trinidad (captured) • Raúl Reyes † • Mono Jojoy † • Alfonso Cano † • Efraín Guzmán † • Iván Ríos † • Sonia (captured) • Tomás Medina Caracas † • Martín Caballero † • Rodrigo Granda • Iván Vargas (captured) • Fabián Ramírez • Carlos Antonio Lozada • Marcos Calarcá • Andrés París • Karina (surrendered) • Romaña • César (captured)Characteristics History • Structure • Attacks • PCCC • Patriotic Union (Colombia) • Front Ricardo Franco • List of political hostagesCategories:- 1930 births
- 2008 deaths
- People from Quindío Department
- Members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
- Colombian communists
- Anti-Revisionists
- Fugitives wanted by the United States
- Deaths from myocardial infarction
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