Colombian guerrilla group kidnapped Liverpool striker Diaz's parents: Bogota
Cilenis Marulanda (L), mother of Liverpool's Colombian football player Luis Diaz, demonstrates for her kidnapped husband in Barrancas, La Guajira, Colombia on October 31, 2023. (Photo by Lismari Machado / AFP)
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The
Colombian government on Thursday accused the ELN guerrilla group, with which it
is seeking to negotiate peace, of kidnapping Liverpool winger Luis Diaz's
parents in their home town last weekend.
Diaz's
mother Cilenis Marulanda was rescued hours after the abduction in Barrancas,
but his father Luis Manuel Diaz has been missing ever since.
The crime
"was perpetrated by a unit belonging to the ELN," a government
official said on X, formerly Twitter, adding: "we demand the ELN
immediately free" the missing man, who local media say is 56 years old.
The ELN and
the government of leftist President Gustavo Petro are in the midst of peace
negotiations and a six-month ceasefire which entered into force in August.
The parents
of Colombia and Liverpool player Diaz were abducted Saturday by armed men on
motorcycles at a gas station in their home town of 38,000 people in the
northern La Guajira department.
Marulanda
was rescued hours later and a massive search operation was launched for her
husband.
Colombian
authorities have said there has been no ransom demand.
The ELN, or
National Liberation Army, has not claimed responsibility for the kidnapping.
"We
demand the ELN immediately free Luis Manuel Diaz," said Thursday's
statement signed by Otty Patino, the head of the government delegation in peace
talks with the ELN.
He added it
was the ELN's "responsibility to guarantee his life and integrity."
Attorney
General Francisco Barbosa has said the older Diaz "could be" in
Venezuela, without giving further details.
Meteoric
rise
Luis Manuel
Diaz was an amateur coach at the only football academy in Barrancas, a town
near the Venezuelan border, where his son showed promise from a very young age.
Dissidents
of the FARC guerrilla group that disarmed in 2017 are also known to be active
in this remote part of Colombia, as are paramilitary fighters and criminal
gangs.
Petro, a
former urban guerrilla himself, took office last August with the stated goal of
achieving "total peace" in a country ravaged by decades of fighting
between the security forces, leftist guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries and
drug gangs.
More than
38,000 people have been kidnapped in Colombia over the years, mainly by groups
raising funds with ransom money.
The ELN,
Colombia's last recognized guerrilla group, started as a leftist ideological
movement in 1964 before turning to crime -- focusing on kidnapping, extortion,
violent attacks and drug trafficking.
With some
5,800 combatants, the group is primarily active in the Pacific region and along
the 2,200-kilometer (1,370-mile) border with Venezuela.
Official
data shows the ELN has a presence in more than 200 municipalities where
fighting has displaced communities caught up in the violence.
"We
remind the ELN that kidnapping is a criminal practice, in violation of
international humanitarian law, and that it is its duty (within the context of)
the current peace process not only to stop the practice but also to eliminate
it forever," said Patino.
The elder
Diaz is credited with aiding the meteoric rise of the Liverpool and Colombia
striker known as Lucho.
Acquaintances
have told AFP that he sometimes sold food he cooked himself to pay for his
son’s trips to Barranquilla, the city where he had his debut with the football
club Junior.
The younger
Diaz, who has not spoken publicly about the kidnapping, has played for his
country 43 times and arrived at Liverpool last year from Portuguese club Porto.
He has
played 11 games with Liverpool and scored three goals, and is the first
Indigenous Colombian to make it to world football's top echelons.
Colombian
police have offered a reward equivalent to about $48,000 for information that
leads them to Diaz and his captors.


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