Clóvis Rossi, who was already more independent in the trade of journalism, simply did not touch the principal fact: Álvaro Uribe invaded a sovereign nation and made an attempt against international law, in an action rejected by Latin-American countries in the Summit of the Rio Group. He preferred to attack FARC, Chávez, Rafael Correa and Lula (target of his current obsession). As for FARC, Rossi stayed to the right of a right-winger, Nicolas Sarkozy. According to the French news agency, ”The number two of FARC, Raúl Reyes, was trying to arrange a meeting with the French president just as he was killed by Colombian troops.” The humanitarian exchange was aiming to free Ingrid Betancourt.
Rossi did not even hear the appeals of relatives of Ingrid Betancourt, former candidate to the presidency of the country who is in FARC captivity for six years. Lorenzo Delloye, her son, accused Uribe of "playing with the lives of the kidnapped and the honor of Colombia." Already her former-husband, Fabrice Delloye, admitted that FARC "shows a humanitarian vision" freeing six kidnapped and asking for more diplomacy to free the prisoners. A position much more balanced than of the hawk Clóvis Rossi, who rejects any negotiation with "delinquents," forgetting that the government of the U.S.A. itself already joined with guerrillas of FARC, and also with Raul Reyes, in 1998.
Advocate of drug traffickers
Besides rejecting the road of negotiation, or of a political exit from a war that has dragged on for 44 years, Rossi also cleared Uribe. He accuses the guerrillas of drug trafficking, but he speaks nothing of the well-known connections of the current president with the cocaine mafias and with paramilitaries. As an obstinate reader, he should read the book of the ex-lover of Pablo Escobar, Virginia Vallejo, the ex-television broadcaster. The work “Loving Pablo, Hating Escobar“ describes the connections of Uribe with the bloodthirsty leader of the Medellín Cartel. Another tip is to read the book of Joseph Contreras, Newsweek journalist. The 260 pages of the work El Señor of las Sombras is rich with information on the trajectory of Álvaro Uribe Vélez, proving that yes he is truly a drug trafficker.
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