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Friday, 11 January 2008, 15:50 GMT

Released hostage eager to see son

Clara Rojas One of the women hostages released by Colombian Farc rebels says she is eager to be reunited with her young son.

Clara Rojas's three-year-old son, fathered by one of her rebel captors, was taken from her at eight months and is now in foster care in Colombia.

Ms Rojas and Consuelo Gonzalez were released in a deal overseen by the Red Cross and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe praised the release and repeated his call for talks with the rebels.

Speaking after the women were handed over by the rebels and flown to Venezuela on Thursday, he said talks should be simple and in good faith, but added that peace would not be achieved by appeasement.

He read out the names of more than 700 people still held by the left-wing group. The Farc wants further releases to be part of an exchange involving hundreds of their own jailed rebels.

'Tiny, divine'

Ms Gonzalez, 57, was kidnapped in 2001. Ms Rojas, 44, an aide to former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, was seized in 2002, while she and former presidential candidate Ms Betancourt were out campaigning.

"I'd like to pick him up in my arms right now"
Clara Rojas

Profile: Freed hostages

Colombia's armed groups

In pictures: Reunion

Ms Rojas told Colombia's Caracol radio network she had had no news in three years of Ms Betancourt, who is still in captivity. She said they had been split up by the rebels for security reasons.

But she said her priority now was to hug her son Emmanuel, named because "he is God's gift". She revealed that the boy was born by Caesarean section in the jungle on 16 April 2004.

Ms Rojas said a Farc male nurse, who had studied medicine but did not graduate, attended the birth accompanied by two other nurses. She said it was a difficult labour, and she then spent 40 days motionless following the Caesarean.

"He was tiny, divine, and his smile was what struck me the most," she added.

After the birth, she was only allowed to see him for a few hours a day, until he was eight months old and taken away suffering from illness and an arm problem from the birth.

Mr Rojas said she "was tenacious" having the baby, but told Caracol Radio it was thanks to him that she was alive.

Proof of life

Earlier this month, DNA tests confirmed that the boy had been traced to a Bogota foster home. Ms Rojas is expected to be return from Venezuela to be reunited with him soon.

Consuelo Gonzalez at Simon Bolivar International Airport

The BBC's Warren Bull says that the reunion will provide Mr Uribe with a media opportunity similar to that enjoyed by Mr Chavez on the hostages' arrival in Caracas.

Emotional scenes greeted their arrival as Mr Rojas was reunited with her elderly mother and Ms Gonzalez embraced her daughters and a granddaughter she had never met.

The two women said the Farc had given Venezuelan authorities proof, including letters and videos, that 16 other hostages were alive.

Ms Rojas said the evidence would be given to Mr Chavez, who would pass it on to the hostages' families.



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