More Doubts About Colombia's "Magic Laptop" and Its Allegations Against Hugo Chavez
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On May 15, the International Police Agency (Interpol) released their long-awaited report on the laptops and computer materials the Colombian Army said it captured after the March 1 bombing and raid on a guerrilla camp in Ecuador. As expected, the Interpol report concluded the hard drives delivered by the Colombian government had not been altered since the raid.
Interpol examined the user files of three laptop computers, three USB thumb drives, and two external hard disks that Bogotá said it seized from the jungle camp of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
The March 1 attack in Ecuador sparked a regional crisis, with most Latin American government following Ecuador's lead in condemning the attack as a patent violation of national sovereignty. Washington was alone in giving unconditional support to Colombia.
Over the last two and a half months, the Colombian government has released--and leaked to the media--a series of documents and photos allegedly found on all the computer devices. The Colombian government has argued, with widespread media credulity, that the documents prove Venezuela and Ecuador's ties to the FARC, as well as other things. The document leaks have been part of a broader media-driven campaign by the Colombian government to justify the attack and distract public attention away from the violation of Ecuador's sovereignty.
Interpol's report contains four central findings:
See more stories tagged with: chavez, colombia, farc, laptop
Daniel Denvir (daniel.denvir(AT)gmail.com) is an activist and freelance journalist living in Quito, Ecuador. His writing has appeared in Labor Notes, Portland Street Roots and Upsidedownworld.org. He works with the Latin American Information Agency (www.alainet.org).
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