Statement says 'mine-clearance expert' Kevin Scott Sutay will be released 'in the spirit of talks with government in Havana'
Colombia's Farc rebels said late on Friday they were holding a US soldier who was captured on 20 June, but were willing to release him to a humanitarian commission as they pursue peace talks with the government.
The Farc, or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, said on its website it had caught the soldier, identified as Kevin Scott Sutay, in a jungle region in the south of the country, describing him as a mine-clearance expert from New York who has served in Afghanistan.
"Despite the right we have to hold Kevin Scott as a prisoner of war, we have taken the political decision to free him in the spirit of talks that are advancing in Havana with the Colombian government," the statement said. It was referring to peace talks in the Cuban capital that began last November, aimed at ending five decades of conflict.
The US, which considers the Farc a terrorist organization, has helped Colombia's government in a military offensive over the last decade that has driven the rebels back into remote regions and diminished their numbers.
The guerrilla group called for a commission to be formed to assist in the soldier's release, headed by a former Colombian senator, Piedad Cordoba, and representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross and the religious community Sant'Egidio. The Farc said Sutay entered Colombia after traveling through Mexico and several Central American states. US embassy officials could not immediately be contacted late on Friday to verify the claims or clarify the circumstances of the soldier's presence in the country.
The Farc began as a communist agrarian movement in 1964 and has fought the government ever since in what is now Latin America's longest-running insurgency. In 2008, the Farc freed three US military contractors which it had held in captivity for more than five years, after shooting down their plane. They were released together with a former Colombian presidential candidate, Ingrid Betancourt.