US Soldiers And Contractors Rape 54 Girls In Colombia And Sell The Videos That Show Their Crimes

Authored by popularresistance.org and submitted by teehanager

US Soldiers And Contractors Rape 54 Girls In Colombia And Sell The Videos That Show Their Crimes

U.S. soldiers and contractors raped at least 54 Colombian girls between 2003 and 2007 in this Latin American country, recorded most of these abuses on video and sold them as pornographic material, according to the “Report of the Historical Commission on the Conflict and its Victims”, prepared by the Colombian government and representatives of the FARC guerrillas in the framework during the peace negotiations.

The 809-page document was developed to establish the “origins and multiple causes of the internal armed conflict” in Colombia. The role of the US military is revealed in the section “The international dimension of the social and armed conflict in Colombia: US interference, counter-insurgency and state terrorism”, written by Renán Vega Cantor, professor of the Department of Social Sciences at the National Pedagogical University.

The author argues that “there is abundant information about sexual violence, taking place with total impunity thanks to bilateral agreements and the diplomatic immunity of U.S. officials, which is part of a sexist and discriminatory behavior called ‘sexual imperialism’, similar to the conduct that occurs everywhere the U.S. military is stationed, such as in the Philippines, Japan or South Korea.”

According to Vega Cantor, “one of the most notorious cases” of abuses by the U.S. military against the local population occurred in Colombia, “in the town of Melgar and neighboring Girardot,” where “53 minors were sexually abused by mercenaries, who also filmed them and sold the tapes as pornographic material.” The professor adds that in addition, “at Melgar, a US contractor and a sergeant raped a 12-year-old girl in 2007.

Following the publication of the report in February 2015, The Daily Beast website has contacted the US Army to find out its position on the accusations made against the US military. Army spokeswoman Cynthia O. Smith has replied in an email that no credible evidence has been found so far, but said further investigation was possible.

“The U.S. Army’s Criminal Investigation Command is currently coordinating with Colombian authorities and plans to conduct criminal investigations into credible allegations of sexual assault or criminal acts committed by U.S. soldiers while in that country,” she said.

“We take this issue very seriously and will aggressively pursue all credible allegations,” the spokeswoman concluded.

Notuniquesnowflake on February 6th, 2020 at 18:50 UTC »

If there is any truth to this, it's horrible, and anyone involved must be held accountable. However, it must be pointed out that the allegations all came from one man, who didn't cite any evidence to back his claim. Not a single victim, not a single court case, no police reports, no names, none of the videos he claimed they made, nothing.

https://time.com/3823044/colombia-us-soldiers-rape/

Edit: After re-reading the article (I was at work, so initially just scanned quickly for the source), there is one alleged victim who does exist. "Castillo claims a U.S. Army sergeant and a military contractor drugged her 12-year-old daughter ". Neither the US nor Colombia Governments found evidence of the rape, but we all know not guilty doesn't necessarily mean innocent. So I believe it's important to recognize that one allegation does have corroborating evidence, namely an alleged-victim who actually exists.

The other 53 are completely pulled out of Vegas ass. Vega is not any kind of official Colombian government source. Rather a man, appointed by FARC, Latin America's oldest, largest, and best-equipped terrorist organization, making allegations with no evidence, no nothing.

BerriesAndMe on February 6th, 2020 at 16:31 UTC »

This is why the US doesn't recognize the international court in the Hague: so their soldiers can't be held responsible for their actions

8livesdown on February 6th, 2020 at 15:34 UTC »

This story first broke in 2015. In case anyone is questioning the reliability of this site, here is another source.

https://time.com/3823044/colombia-us-soldiers-rape/