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U.S. may rename embassy wing for pilot killed by Colombia rebels

September 24, 2008 |  9:43 am

Coloumbia_us_hostages

Northrop Grumman contractor Tom Janis was slain in 2003 after making a difficult crash landing in the jungle. His three American colleagues were held hostage by the FARC until this summer, when they were liberated in a military resuce operation.

Now, reports Chris Kraul from Bogota, officials want to rename a wing of the U.S Embassy in the capital after Janis.

"The 2009 State and Foreign Operations Appropriations bill coming to a vote soon in Congress contains an amendment by Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) proposing that a section of the bunker-like embassy be renamed in honor of Thomas Janis. Passage is likely.

'Tom Janis saved our lives,' said rescued defense contractors Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell in a statement e-mailed to The Times in support of the proposed honor. 'He was exceptionally brave. ... Tom Janis is a hero.' "

Read the rest of Kraul's dispatch from Bogota on the future name of a wing of the U.S Embassy there here.

For more on Colombia, click here.

-- Deborah Bonello in Mexico City

Photo: Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves and Thomas Howes inside an airplane after being rescued in July this year. Credit: European Pressphoto Agency


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