Colombia's ELN rebels free two Dutch journalists

BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's Marxist ELN rebel group said on Friday it has freed two Dutch journalists captured this week in the northeast of the Andean country. The reporters, Derk Johannes Bolt, 62, a television journalist, and Eugenio Ernest Marie Follender, 58, a cameraman, "have been released in perfect conditions," the group said on Twitter. Bolt and Follender were seized in El Tarra in Norte de Santander on Monday. The 2,000-strong ELN frequently kidnaps Colombians and foreigners, many of whom work in oil operations, for ransom and political leverage. The ELN, the second-largest rebel group after the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), is in talks with the government to put an end to more than five decades of war. FARC signed a peace deal last year and is currently demobilizing its guerillas. More than 220,000 people have been killed in a conflict that pitted the military against the FARC, ELN and right-wing paramilitary armies. Last year the ELN seized a Spanish journalist, freeing her six days later. (Reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb; Editing by Leslie Adler)