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Colombia's main leftist group, notorious for drugs and kidnapping, gives women equality, freedom. October 6, Eliana Gonzalez was married at 14 and gave birth to her daughter a year later. Her husband, a landless peasant, would disappear on drunken binges for days at time, she says, "But he was the kind of man who believed a woman should always stay at home. I had to get his permission just to visit my parents.
I wanted things to change," says Ms. Gonzalez, explaining why 26 years ago she left her family, chose a new name, and became a guerrilla fighter in what is now Colombia's largest - and most feared - rebel army.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, are best known in the wider world for their reliance on kidnapping and extortion, close ties with the illegal narcotics trade, and casual use of extreme violence. So why are increasing numbers of Colombian women choosing to join them?
When Gonzalez became a guerrilla in , the FARC had fewer than members, of whom only a handful were women. Now the group fields some 15, fighters, including more than 5, women. The figures alone illustrate the escalation of Colombia's bloody year conflict, which pits leftist rebels against state security forces and their de facto allies, illegal right-wing paramilitaries.
According to military analyst Alfredo Rangel, the FARC are stepping up their recruiting drives throughout the country. But while the numbers indicate the scale of the violence, they also reflect the social conditions that helped trigger Colombia's war. Their families don't have money for education and there are no jobs," says Mariluz Rubio, human rights ombudsman in San Vicente del Caguan, the largest town in a southern region ceded to the rebels to enable peace talks that began in January, In much of rural Colombia, there has never been a consistent state presence, or investment in any kind of infrastructure or legal economy.