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04.07.2008 - Freed Betancourt heads to France

French-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt is Betancourt, 14 others freed by Colombian forces ...
Venezuela formally protests Colombia's alleged encroachment ...
due in Paris, two days after her dramatic release from captivity in the Colombian jungle.

The former hostage will be met by President Nicolas Sarkozy, who campaigned for her release, before attending a lavish public welcome.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.paristravelguide.info


She said she was going to France to thank its people for their support and share "this moment of her happiness".
She was freed with 14 other captives in an undercover operation.
They were rescued without a shot being fired as left-wing Farc rebels were tricked into handing them over.
Ms Betancourt was born in Colombia but grew up and studied in France.
President Sarkozy will meet her on arrival at a military airfield near Paris and take her to the Elysee Palace, his residence, for an official ceremony.

The BBC's Jonny Dymond in Paris says coverage of her liberation and subsequent movements has been pretty much non-stop on French TV and radio.
"I want to come to France to thank all French people and share with them this moment of happiness," she said as she left Bogota on Thursday.
She also told reporters that Colombia's Farc guerrillas now had the opportunity to hand over their remaining hostages and take the path towards peace.
"I hope that the Farc understands that this is the time to release all its hostages and use this release, this act, not only to improve its now tarnished image, but especially for us here in Colombia, to try to make this the first step towards a negotiated peace."
Farc, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, has been waging a guerrilla war to establish a Marxist government for the past four decades.
The group still holds more than 40 high-profile hostages, among up to 700 other captives.
Emotional reunion
Ms Betancourt was campaigning for the presidency against current incumbent Alvaro Uribe when she was kidnapped in a Farc-controlled area of southern Colombia in 2002.
After her release she thanked Mr Uribe and said she still aspired "to serve Colombia as president".
Mr Uribe was first elected president in 2002. He has pursued a hardline stance against Colombia's left-wing guerrilla groups while making tentative peace overtures.
Wednesday's successful rescue by Colombian security forces was lauched after a disgruntled Farc member who had gone over to the government side infiltrated the group's leadership.
He convinced them to move Ms Betancourt and 14 other hostages to a rendezvous point in the jungle.
Waiting there were Colombian soldiers, posing as members of a non-government organisation.
The local commander in charge of the hostages and another rebel were captured. They now face extradition to the US.
Colombian Vice-President Francisco Santos told the BBC that it was the beginning of the end of the Farc.
He said the government was weakening the rebels to a point of no return.
The operation was carried out with the help of US spy satellites which tracked the rebels and the hostages on a weeks-long journey through the jungle that ended with the rescue.
Ms Betancourt later had a tearful reunion with her two children, Melanie and Lorenzo Delloye-Betancourt, who had flown to the Colombian capital Bogota from France.
They were 16 and 13 when she was seized.

(BBC)


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