BEIJING, May 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Colombia on Wednesday
extradited one of South America's most feared paramilitary warlords to the
United States to stand trial on drug trafficking charges, the government
said.
Carlos Mario Jimenez was flown to Washington, D.C.,
via Miami on a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration plane, according to
President Alvaro Uribe's office, just hours after Colombia's top judicial panel
overturned a Supreme Court decision that had temporarily blocked the
extradition.
The Supreme Court had ruled last month that Jimenez
should not leave the country until he has confessed to crimes he is accused of
committing as the leader of illegal far-right militias and paid reparations to
victims. On Tuesday, the judiciary's high council overturned that decision.
Last year, the Colombian government stripped Jimenez
of the benefits of a peace process ¡ª including protection from extradition ¡ª
because it said he was continuing to traffic in drugs and run paramilitary
operations from prison.
Far-right paramilitaries are engaged in a peace
process with the government in which more than 31,000 fighters have laid down
their weapons. Commanders must confess to crimes in exchange for reduced
sentences.
The 42-year-old Jimenez, better known by his alias,
"Macaco," was among the least cooperative warlords and in August became the
first militia leader to lose his benefits under the peace deal. He is now the
first to be extradited to the United States.
Many victims of the private militias ¡ª which killed
thousands and stole millions of acres of land ¡ª opposed Jimenez's extradition,
arguing that his victims would never be compensated and that many of his
partners in crime would escape prosecution.
(Agencies)