Toronto Star

Colombia enraged over death threat against 11-year-old

- MANUEL RUEDA

VILLETA, COLOMBIA—A social-media death threat aimed at an 11-year-old environmen­tal activist has roused outrage in Colombia, a nation where attacks on social leaders are common and threats are taken seriously.

Colombian officials said they are investigat­ing the death threat against Francisco Vera, and President Ivan Duque recently promised in a television appearance his government would find “the bandits” behind the Twitter message.

For his part, the boy says he will continue to lead environmen­tal campaigns and urged other young people to use social media to “support causes they believe in.”

Vera, who has drawn comparison­s to teenage Swedish environmen­tal activist Greta Thunberg, got together with six friends from school about two years ago and marched to the main park in his hometown of Villeta carrying cardboard signs and chanting slogans about climate change, under the supervisio­n of his grandmothe­r.

His Guardians for Life group now has at least 11 chapters and more than 200 members across Colombia. It planted hundreds of trees last year and petitioned Colombia’s government to ban single-use plastics. He spoke before the country’s congress last year.

On Jan. 15, the boy received a gruesome, profanely worded death threat from a Twitter account using a false name in response to a video he posted urging Duque to improve internet access for children studying from home in the pandemic.

Such threats have weight in Colombia. The United Nations says that at least 53 community leaders were murdered in the South American country last year and it is examining reports of an additional 80 such slayings.

Twitter suspended the threatenin­g account and the boy received hundreds of messages of support, including a letter that was hand-delivered by UN officials. Signed by the UN high commission­er for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, it congratula­ted Francisco for his work on behalf of the environmen­t.

At home in Villeta, a small town surrounded by mountains, Francisco said he welcomes “constructi­ve criticism” and is trying to ignore the threat as well as messages in which critics accuse him of being an instrument of leftist politician­s.

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