ELN Rebels Holding Two Colombian Soldiers after Attack

W460

Colombian rebel group the National Liberation Army (ELN) is holding two soldiers hostage after capturing them in an attack that killed 12 troops and police, officials said Tuesday.

"Two soldiers have been kidnapped," said Defense Minister Luis Carlos Villegas after President Juan Manuel Santos convened an extraordinary meeting of his national security council in the wake of Monday's attack in the remote indigenous reserve of Bachira.

The attack, which killed 11 soldiers and one police officer, targeted a convoy transporting result sheets from the country's local and regional elections Sunday.

It disrupted what Santos had called the most peaceful elections in conflict-torn Colombia's recent history.

The ELN, the smaller of two leftist guerrilla groups fighting the Colombian government since the 1960s, has staged a series of recent attacks even as the government closes in on a peace deal with rival rebel group the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

Monday's attack also left three soldiers wounded. A policeman and a guide from the indigenous U'wa group are still missing.

Villegas said the government holds the ELN responsible for the "life and safety" of the two soldiers and reiterated the president's vow to continue the army's offensive against the group.

The government estimates the ELN has some 2,500 fighters and the FARC around 7,000.

The ELN and the government have been holding preliminary talks since January 2014, but have not opened a formal peace process.

The nearly three-year-old peace talks with the FARC have made progress on key issues in recent weeks, and Santos has vowed to reach a deal by the end of March.

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