TWELVE people were wounded on Wednesday when a bomb exploded outside the Colombian intelligence agency’s offices in the southern city of Pasto, near the Ecuadoran border, the Red Cross said.
A “low-intensity package bomb was left outside the Administrative Department of Security (DAS) building, next to a lamppost, by a man who then ran away,” Pasto Red Cross official Henry Palacios said. He said 12 passersby and workers from the DAS building were wounded in the blast and taken to area hospitals.
Narino department Governor  Antonio Navarro told Caracol radio that two of the wounded were in  serious condition and that the damage wrought by the bomb was  considerable.
He said authorities suspect the bombing was the  work of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the  country’s oldest and strongest rebel group.  Shortly after the  blast, DAS agents detained a man and a woman who were leaving the area  in a taxi and are suspected of being behind the blast, DAS Director  Felipe Munoz said.
Pasto is the capital of Narino department, one of the FARC’s strongholds in southern Colombia. On Tuesday, six police officers on road patrol were ambushed and killed in Samaniego.
FARC guerrillas have stepped up their attacks since President Juan Manuel Santos took office on August 7 and rebuffed the rebels’ offer of peace talks, demanding instead that they lay down their weapons and release all their hostages.

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