Ex-FARC hostages say Betancourt "very sick" in jungle

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BOGOTA | Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:47am GMT

BOGOTA (Reuters) - French-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt, held hostage by FARC guerrillas, is "very sick" in a rebel jungle camp and has been mistreated by her captors, two hostages released on Wednesday said.

Betancourt, a dual French-Colombian citizen captured six years ago, and three U.S. contractors are among the high-profile hostages held in secret jungle camps by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, guerrillas.

"As a woman and a mother, I want to send a message to Ingrid Betancourt, who has been left behind in the jungle very sick," Gloria Polanco, a former lawmaker released after more than six years in captivity, told Caracol radio.

The FARC released Polanco and three other hostages in a deal brokered by left-wing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who has riled Bogota and Washington by calling for the guerrillas to be taken off international terrorism lists.

Another freed hostage, ex-lawmaker Luis Eladio Perez, said Betancourt suffered from liver problems and been badly mistreated by her captors.

"It hurts my soul, she is very bad, very, very sick. She is physically and morally exhausted," he said. "Ingrid is mistreated very badly, they have vented their anger on her, they have her chained up in inhumane conditions."

Betancourt was last seen in a rebel video released last year where she looked gaunt and despondent in front of the camera, sitting at a wooden bench in the jungle. In a letter to her mother she wrote: "We live like the dead."

Perez said the three Americans -- Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves and Thomas Howes -- all suffered from jungle illnesses and injuries received when their aircraft crashed in the jungle during an anti-drug mission in 2003.

He said he had spent the last six months of his captivity sleeping in the same camp as the three U.S. Defence Department contractors, who recently marked five years in rebel hands.

A recent decision by a U.S. judge to sentence a rebel commander, alias "Simon Trinidad," to 60 years in prison for his part in the kidnapping of the Americans hit the three men hard. The rebels say the U.S. captives must be exchanged for two guerrilla commanders jailed in the United States.

"They are pretty down, especially after the sentencing of Simon Trinidad," Perez said.

A deal to release all high profile rebel hostages has been stalled over a rebel demand that Uribe demilitarize an area to facilitate hostage exchange. Uribe rejects the condition because he says it will allow the FARC to regroup.

(Reporting by Patrick Markey, editing by Patricia Zengerle)

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