Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Colombian officials say Farc used forced abortions as an ‘instrument of war’ to avoid losing female fighters.
Colombian officials say Farc used forced abortions as an ‘instrument of war’ to avoid losing female fighters. Photograph: Christian Escobar Mora/epa/Corbis
Colombian officials say Farc used forced abortions as an ‘instrument of war’ to avoid losing female fighters. Photograph: Christian Escobar Mora/epa/Corbis

Spain arrests man known as 'The Nurse' for forced abortions on Colombia rebels

This article is more than 8 years old

A former fighter with the Farc guerrilla group is accused of carrying out more than 500 forced abortions on female members of the group

Spanish police have arrested a man accused of performing more than 500 forced abortions on women fighters belonging to Colombia’s rebel guerrillas.

The man, known as “The Nurse” and described by Spanish police in a statement as a former fighter in the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) himself, was detained in Madrid on Sunday. The police did not reveal his identity and could not immediately be reached for further comment.

The arrest comes after Colombia’s top prosecutor, attorney general Eduardo Montealegre, said on Friday that his office was investigating 150 cases of former female rebel fighters who claimed they had been forced to terminate their pregnancies.

Montealegre said there was evidence that Farc fighters used forced abortions to avoid losing female fighters “as an instrument of war”. In the past the Farc has denied forcing women and girls to undergo abortions and said contraception is provided to female fighters in their ranks.

Spanish police said that according to Colombian authorities, victims of “The Nurse” had been raped by Farc fighters and included at least 50 underage girls. Some were forced to abort in the late stages of pregnancy.

Most of the abortions were carried out between 1998 and 2000, the police added.

Colombia’s government has been in talks with Farc for the past three years to end a five-decade-old conflict that has cost the lives of more than 220,000 people and displaced millions more.

Most viewed

Most viewed