Troops are searching for 23 oil workers kidnapped by armed men in eastern Colombia
Troops are searching for 23 oil workers kidnapped by armed men in eastern Colombia, the country's army said in a statement.
The kidnapping was reported around 4 p.m. Monday in Colombia's Vichada province, the army said. Authorities said it appeared those responsible were members of the FARC leftist guerrilla group.
Army officials said the victims were working for Canada-based Talisman Energy. In a statement released late Monday, Talisman confirmed that 22 employees of seismic contractor South American Exploration were kidnapped.
The workers were Colombian nationals, "and most are members of the indigenous communities of the area," Talisman's statement said.
A representative of South American Exploration could not be reached for comment early Tuesday.
The army pledged to provide "troops and necessary resources that permit the safe return of the kidnapped to their homes."
The FARC, or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia, have been at war with the Colombian government since the 1960s.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos issued a new warning to the group last week, according to a statement released by his office.
"I say this to the members of the FARC who still think that they are going to achieve something through weapons, I say that the only future that is left for them if they continue with the violence will be a tomb or a jail," he said.