BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) ? A French journalist was missing early Sunday along with five Colombian security force members following combat with leftist rebels that claimed the lives of three soldiers and a police officer, Colombia's Defense Ministry said.
It identified the missing journalist as Romeo Langlois, whose has worked for media including the Paris newspaper Le Figaro, and said he was accompanying troops on a counterdrug mission in the southern state of Caqueta.
In a statement, the ministry said four soldiers were also wounded in what it called "heavy combat" with the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, during an operation by Counternarcotics Batallion No. 1 that destroyed five cocaine processing labs.
Langlois is a Colombia resident, and the ministry identified him as a "war correspondent."
It did not say when the counterdrug mission began.
A senior police official said the combat occurred on Saturday and that heavy rain in the area after nightfall was impeding military operations. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to provide information.
The Defense Ministry said that in addition to Langlois, four soldiers and a police officer were missing. The operation occurred in the hamlet of Buena Vista in the municipality of Montanita.
Langlois is a freelancer with experience in the region and covering the FARC, an official with the French Foreign Ministry said. He added that Langlois recently worked for all-news television network France-24,
The official, who was not authorized to be publicly named according to ministry policy, said the French government is in contact with Langlois' family as Colombian authorities search for those missing. He said it was too early to release any further information.
The FARC, founded in 1964, is Latin America's last remaining major leftist insurgency. Funded largely by the cocaine trade, it has in recent years been seriously weakened by Colombia's U.S.-backed military. It is believed to number about 8,000 fighters.
The FARC released earlier this month what it said were its last remaining "political prisoners" after pledging to halt ransom kidnapping.
It has been blamed for the kidnapping last June of four Chinese oil workers in the same southern state where Saturday's incident occurred.
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Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.
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