The Palace of Justice siege: 31 years since rebels unleashed Colombia's 'holocaust'
Colombia Palace hostages
Colombia Palace hostages

(Government employees, some crying, are led from Colombia's Palace of Justice after an army assault on the building set free more than 100 people held there by leftist guerrillas, November 7, 1985.AP Photo/Carlos Gonzalez)

On Wednesday, November 6, 1985, members of the Colombian guerrilla group M19, or the April 19 movement, stormed Colombia’s Palace of Justice and held all 25 of the country's Supreme Court justices and hundreds of other civilians hostage.

The M19 rebels were reportedly there with the backing of the country's most powerful drug lord, Pablo Escobar.

Over the next two days, the Colombian army mounted an operation to retake the building and free the hostages.

By the time the crisis was resolved, almost all of the 30 to 40 rebels were dead, scores of hostages had been killed or “disappeared,” and 11 of the court’s 25 justices had been slain.

'Restore order, but above all avoid bloodshed'

The M19 rebels, a left-wing group that later became a political party, took the court with the goal of forcing the justices to try then-President Belisario Betancur and his defense minister for violating a peace deal the Colombian government had reached with the rebels a year-and-a-half earlier.

M19 also opposed the government’s move toward extraditing Colombians to the US, a point on which the rebels and Colombia’s powerful drug traffickers, led by Pablo Escobar, agreed. According to both Mark Bowden's "Killing Pablo" and Escobar’s son, the Medellin drug boss paid M19 $1 million for the job.

During a radio broadcast from inside the court after the rebels seized the building, an M19 member said that their aim was “to denounce a Government that has betrayed the Colombian people.”

Colombia Palace siege army
Colombia Palace siege army

(A Colombian policeman hits the pavement as leftist guerrillas holding the Palace of Justice open up with submachine guns in Bogota, November 6, 1986. A group of plainclothes policemen huddles near two armored personnel carriers. The Palace of Justice building is at left behind the corrugated steel.AP Photo)

The initial response of Betancur was: “Restore order, but above all avoid bloodshed.” But after that, he reportedly “encouraged the army to do its dirty work in the name of preserving legality” and refused to end the siege.

He also refused to take phone calls from the president of the Supreme Court, Justice Alfonso Reyes (who was being held hostage), or order a ceasefire to permit negotiations.

Not long after the rebels seized the five-story building, government forces used explosives and automatic weapons to retake some of the lower floors. In the process, they reportedly rescued about 100 of the hostages.