Los Angeles Times

Colombian VP says she was bomb target

Explosives were found buried beside a rural road leading to her home, she says.

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BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombia’s vice president said Tuesday that her security team had found more than 15 pounds of explosives buried next to a rural road that leads to her home in the southweste­rn province of Cauca. She described the incident as an assassinat­ion attempt.

Francia Marquez shared a police report on her Twitter account that says a drugsniffi­ng dog alerted authoritie­s to the bomb, which was made of ammonium nitrate, powdered aluminum and shrapnel, and that anti-explosives officers blew it up in a controlled explosion on Monday.

The vice president, who has previously faced death threats, described the latest incident as a new assassinat­ion attempt that won’t stop her advocacy for peace and equality.

Marquez is Colombia’s first Black vice president. She was elected in September along with President Gustavo Petro, an economist and former guerrilla fighter, who is attempting to raise taxes on the wealthy, increase government spending and start peace talks with rebel groups.

Before she entered politics, Marquez led protests against mining companies and illegal miners operating in Cauca and was forced to leave her home village of Suarez amid death threats.

The environmen­tal activist rose to fame when she participat­ed in presidenti­al primaries last year and helped Petro secure votes in Afro-Colombian communitie­s and among women and young people. Marquez heads the Ministry of Equality, a new agency that seeks to ensure women and ethnic minorities have equal access to social programs.

“We will not stop working day by day to achieve the total peace that Colombia dreams of and requires,” she wrote on Twitter.

 ?? Luisa Gonzalez Associated Press ?? FRANCIA MARQUEZ, Colombia’s vice president
Luisa Gonzalez Associated Press FRANCIA MARQUEZ, Colombia’s vice president

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