Camouflaged guerrillas broke into cabins where more than a dozen foreign backpackers slept, took their valuables, then marched eight of the fittest tourists into the jungles surrounding Colombia's tallest peak.
The remaining backpackers on Monday recounted their narrow escape from the mass kidnapping, which has dealt a blow to Colombia's efforts to restore a degree of normalcy amid four decades of guerrilla warfare.
Four Israelis, two Britons, a German and a Spaniard were kidnapped at dawn on Friday in spectacular pre-Columbian archaeological ruins known as Ciudad Perdida, or Lost City, in the snowcapped Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta range.
Army General Leonel Gomez said the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was likely responsible, but that other illegal armed groups had not been ruled out as suspects. The FARC and a smaller rebel group, the National Liberation Army, have often carried out kidnappings during their four-decade-old war against the Colombian government.
Hardline Colombian President Alvaro Uribe pledged to personally oversee the search operation for the eight backpackers, reportedly involving thousands of troops and Black Hawk helicopters. Periodic rainstorms and high altitudes were hampering the search, officials said.
An Israeli police expert reportedly joined the search teams as British consular officials arrived Monday in Santa Marta, a city on the Caribbean coast at the foot of the mountains, 75km northwest of the Lost City.
Meanwhile, seven backpackers briefly detained along with the eight others by the rebels recounted how they were likely allowed to go because they were physically unfit -- or simply lacked sturdy walking shoes.
"I was half asleep when I heard lots of voices. Then two men in camouflage burst in holding assault rifles," said Mathijs Grote Beverborg, a 29-year-old Dutchman.
"I pretended not to understand, but it was clear they wanted to take us away," Beverborg said in an interview in Santa Marta.
The rebels, who also wielded machetes, were firm but not overly hostile and were probably between 18 and 20 years old, he said.
The guerrillas lined up all the foreigners outside in the rain and removed their money and valuables before carefully selecting their victims, Beverborg said. Sleeping bags and other heavy items were left behind.
Mark Tuite, a 33-year-old Australian, believes he was spared because he and his wife, Michelle, are both overweight, with the rebels believing they would have had trouble keeping up in their forced march into captivity.
"They were very professional," Tuite said of the kidnappers.
The backpackers who were not abducted were tied together and locked in a room.
"They said they had booby-trapped the door with a grenade, but then our guide showed up and saw that the grenade was not activated," said Tuite, who spent two days hiking back to safety with the other backpackers who were not taken.
Authorities identified the hostages as Beni Daniel, 26; Orpaz Ohayon, 22; Ido Yosef Guy, 26; Erez Altawil, 24, all from Israel; Britons Mark Henderson, 31, and Mathew Scott, 19; and Asier Huegun Echeverria, 29, of San Sebastian, Spain. German officials refused to release the identity of the German hostage, but the travel agency that organized the tour to the Lost City identified him as Reinhel Welgel.
The FARC is blamed for most of the 3,000 kidnappings that take place every year in Colombia. It is holding as hostages three US military contractors and dozens of Colombian politicians, police and soldiers whom the rebels want to exchange for imprisoned guerrillas.
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