Jaime Ramírez Gómez
Jaime Ramírez Gómez | |
---|---|
BG Jaime Ramírez Gómez | |
Brigadier General | |
Personal details | |
Born | July 4, 1940 |
Died |
November 17, 1986 Fontibón |
Jaime Ramírez Gómez (July 4, 1940 - November 17, 1986) was an official of the National Police of Colombia, who led a fight against the illegal drug trade in Colombia from the 1970s onwards. For this reason, he became the national director of the Colombian drug enforcement unit, working in a team with the Minister of Justice Rodrigo Lara Bonilla against the Medellín Cartel. The biggest blow against the cartel was dealt by Colonel Ramírez (later Brigadier General) on March 7, 1984 in a very well planned operation involving the DEA to locate and destroy a huge cocaine production camp in the middle of the jungles of the Yari River (between the departments of Caqueta and Meta) known by the cartel as "Tranquilandia" (the Tranquil Land). It triggered direct hostilities by the cartel against the Colombian State, commencing with the murders of Minister Lara Bonilla on April 20, 1984 and Colonel Jaime Ramírez Gómez two years later.
The importance of Brigadier General Ramírez's fight against the drug traffickers has been highlighted many years after his murder because of the major damage caused by drug cartels to both Colombian and international communities. On August 10, 1992, seven years after the murder of Ramírez, the President of the Republic decreed that he should receive a posthumous promotion to Brigadier General, a position that was due to be given to him one month after his murder.
Carvalho and the Queen of Cocaine
Colonel Ramírez's fight started in the 1970s when he led the dismantling of a gang of counterfeiters and drug traffickers in Bogotá, who were led by a Brazilian man known as Iván Darío Carvalho, alias "El Mocho", allegedly born in Medellín. The Police arrested him in April 1975 and found cocaine valued at 150 million Colombian pesos along with equipment for the counterfeiting of passports and visas at his residence. This operation led to a police incursion into a property of El Mocho in the municipality of Tena, Cundinamarca, where they found connections with Verónica Rivera de Vargas, alias the Queen of Cocaina.[1]
Chief of the Colombian Drug Enforcement Unit
Colonel Ramírez's successes against drug cartels brought him to the position of Director of the Colombian Drug Enforcement Unit at the same moment that the political leader Rodrigo Lara Bonilla, a bitter enemy of drug cartels and corruption, was promoted to the position of Minister of Justice by the Presidency of Belisario Betancourt Cuartas (1982-1986). Ramírez and Lara assembled a team to search for connections with drug traffickers and enlisted thirty people, many of them participating in politics,[2] and discovered that the cartels were using several aircraft and legal airports to export illegal drugs to United States and Europe. With that information, Minister Lara ordered the suspension of any flight that was seen as suspicious, dealing a heavy blow to the cartels' operations, as well as denouncing dirty money in different political parties and even in sport teams.
The enforcement actions of Minister Lara against ringleaders such as Pablo Escobar Gaviria, Carlos Lehder, Gonzalo Rodríguez Gacha, the Ochoa brothers (Fabio, Jorge and Juan David Ochoa), all known as the Medellín Cartel, made him a target for assassination. Security protection for Minister Lara was strict under Colonel Ramírez and the DEA, who frustrated a first attempt at murder in Medellín which led to the arrest of American Joseph Harold Rosenthal, alias Edward John Burn, involved in money laundering associated to narcotics.[3]
The next big blow to the Medellín Cartel and probably the biggest one, was also led by Colonel Ramírez and the DEA, with the agreement of Minister Lara. It was the destruction of a huge camp for the production of cocaine hidden in the jungles of the Yarí River, between the departments of Caquetá and Meta. The place was named "Tranquilandia" (Tranquil Land) by the cartel. The Police seized 1,500 kilograms of cocaine (13.8 tons) and arrested 40 people in what was called the "Yarí '84" Operation on March 7, 1984. The camp had 9 cocaine laboratories, 8 landing strips, health centers, communications and basic services such as water and electricity.[4]
With the destruction of Tranquilandia, the cartel declared war on the Colombian State, starting with the murder of Minister Lara on April 30, 1984, seven weeks after the seizure of the cocaine production camp.
Murder of Colonel Ramírez
The death of Minister Lara brought terrible consequences for both Colombia and for the cartel leaders who as a result became a target of international persecution. Colombia was deeply divided between those who accepted the drug cartel's corruption and those who joined to fight against it, many times without the support of the State. Although the Medellín Cartel was damaged, it was powerful and began a chain of murders against political leaders, judges, police, journalists and anyone who dared to stand against it.
Colonel Ramírez's name was put in the hit list of the cartel and it did not rest until it was able to break through his security to avenge the damage he did to its criminal network. On November 17, 1986, when he was returning with his family to Bogotá, men in a green Renault 18 began to shoot at his car on a bridge between the municipalities of Mosquera and Fontibón, taking advantage of the fact that he was without a convoy. Colonel Ramírez lost control of his car and crashed against a rock, not far from a police station. The assassins approached his car and shot him in front of his wife and sons.[5]
The murder of Colonel Ramírez was just one act in a macabre war by the Medellín Cartel against the Colombian State in its attempt to outsmart it. But it was also a milestone which resulted in the fight against the cartel being quickly strengthened with the international support of the DEA in order to hunt down the main ringleaders. On August 18, 1989 a successor of Ramírez, Colonel Waldemar Franklin Quintero, was also murdered by the same cartel, but 4 months later, on December 15, 1989 justice received its first meaningful victory in that war with the death of Gonzalo Rodríguez Gacha, alias The Mexican.[6] The next success was when Pablo Escobar Gaviria, alias El Patrón, surrendered himself to the authorities in 1991, however he made sure that the Colombian government would agree to a non-extradition regulation so that he could not be extradited to the United States. Afterwards, he escaped and tried to create his own war against the State, but he was shot down by the Police Special Force on December 2, 1993.[7]
Legacy
Although Colonel Ramírez was not properly recognized while alive for facing almost alone the power of the drug cartels, his importance has been acknowledged years after his death, thanks to historical accounts from different sources, including his own former enemies such as John Jairo Velásquez, alias Popeye, lieutenant of Pablo Escobar, who published a book, "Surviving Pablo Escobar" (2015), where he described the crimes of the Medellín Cartel.
Honorable Mentions
Colonel Ramírez was murdered one month before what would have been his promotion to Brigadier General. After his death, the Direction of the Colombian Police suspended a posthumous promotion allegedly because "he died outside a police operation".[8] After a legal battle of seven years, the Presidency of César Gaviria Trujillo ordered his posthumous promotion to Brigadier General.
Representations in Television
- In the series of Caracol Television, Pablo Escobar, The Drug Lord (2012) by Carlos Moreno, portraying the life of the drug lord, Colonel Ramírez is called "Colonel Jiménez" by actor Julio Pachón.
- In the series of Fox Telecolombia, Alias El Mexicano (2013) by Diego Mejía and Monica Botero, Colonel Ramírez keeps his same real name and he is performed by actor Rafael Novoa. In this series, Colonel Ramírez is one of the protagonists at the side of Minister Lara and some fictional characters who represent the fight of many people that faced the drug traffickers despite the fear of losing their lives.
References
- ↑ Los jinetes de la cocaína. Capítulo III: Nacen las familias, No. 3: La organización en Bogotá. Enlace rescatado el 18 de abril de 2016 de http://www.derechos.org/nizkor/colombia/libros/jinetes/cap3.html
- ↑ ¿Quién mató al Coronel Ramírez? Revista Semana, 13 de abril de 1987. Enlace rescatado el 18 de abril de 2016 de http://www.semana.com/nacion/articulo/quien-mato-al-coronel-ramirez/8791-3
- ↑ ¿Quién mató al Coronel Ramírez? Revista Semana, 13 de abril de 1987. Enlace rescatado el 18 de abril de 2016 de http://www.semana.com/nacion/articulo/quien-mato-al-coronel-ramirez/8791-3
- ↑ El golpe a Tranquilandia (2013). Revista Dinero, 21 de agosto de 2013. Enlace rescatado el 19 de abril de 2016 de http://www.dinero.com/edicion-impresa/caratula/articulo/el-golpe-
- ↑ El héroe de la Policía Antinarcótivos (2012). El Espectador, 24 de julio de 2012. Enlace rescatado el 19 de abril de 2016 de http://www.elespectador.com/noticias/el-heroe-de-policia-antinarcoticos-articulo-362373
- ↑ «Fue toda una cacería por tierra, mar y aire». El Tiempo. 17 de diciembre de 1989. Enlace rescatado el 17 de abril de 2016 de https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=b5wbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=PVMEAAAAIBAJ&hl=es&pg=5366%2C582379
- ↑ «La muerte de Pablo Escobar ya tiene otra versión». El Colombiano. 2 de diciembre de 2014. Enlace rescatado el 19 de abril de 2016 de http://www.elcolombiano.com/la-muerte-de-pablo-escobar-ya-tiene-otra-version-BF799524.
- ↑ Ascenso póstumo a ex jefe antinarcóticos de la la policía. El Tiempo, 22 de agosto de 1992. Enlace rescatado el 17 de abril de 2016 de http://www.eltiempo.com/archivo/documento/MAM-184566