Venezuelan and Ecuadorean troops deployed on
Colombia's frontier last night as South America's military
and diplomatic crisis escalated into a dangerous showdown
between President Hugo Chávez and Colombia's US-backed
government.
Venezuela started shutting crossing points on the 1,400-mile
border to try to isolate its neighbour after Bogotá
made a series of extraordinary allegations about the Venezuelan
leader funding Marxist guerrillas intent on building a uranium-enriched
"dirty" bomb.
"Colombia proposes to denounce Hugo Chávez, president
of Venezuela, in the international criminal court for sponsoring
and financing genocide," said President Alvaro Uribe.
The Organisation of American States, a pan-regional body,
held an emergency meeting in Washington to seek a diplomatic
solution after President George Bush sided with Colombia,
his administration's key ally in Latin America. The US president
accused Venezuela of "provocative manoeuvres" and
said he stood by Bogotá and its fight against terrorism.
He also urged Congress to approve a free-trade agreement with
Colombia.
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Pictures of Venezuelan trucks and tanks rolling west, the
vanguard of 10 battalions which were ordered to mobilise,
and of Ecuadorean troops moving to the Colombian frontier
from the other side of the Andes, underlined the risk of South
America enduring its first war in over a decade. Quito and
Caracas have severed diplomatic ties with their neighbour.
"A serious cross-border military conflict is unlikely
[but] the chain of actions and reactions often has a life
of its own. There is no telling where it could lead,"
said Michael Shifter, of the Inter-American Dialogue thinktank.
Colombia triggered the crisis last Saturday by bombing a
rebel camp one mile inside Ecuador, killing at least 21 members
of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), including
a senior commander, Raul Reyes.
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