Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Nine dead in Colombia car bombing

No group claims responsibi­lity

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BOGOTA, Colombia — At least nine people were killed and dozens more injured in a car bombing at a heavily guarded police academy in Colombia’s capital Thursday, recalling the high-profile attacks associated with the bloodiest chapters of the country’s drug-fueled guerrilla conflict.

The scene outside the General Santander police academy in southern Bogota was chaotic in the immediate aftermath of the midmorning attack, the biggest against a police or military facility in the capital in over a decade.

Videos circulatin­g on social media show panicked police officers carrying injured colleagues on stretchers along a road strewn with debris and body parts. In the distance, the skeletal steel remains of the vehicle used in the attack can be seen still burning.

Bogota’s health department said 54 people were injured. Among the dead were a Panamanian and an Ecuadorian national.

Rafael Trujillo said he was delivering a care package to his son Gerson, who entered the school just two days ago, when the blast occurred.

“I’m sad and very worried because I don’t have any informatio­n about my son,” said Mr. Trujillo, standing outside the facility, where police officers had set up a taped perimeter as forensic specialist­s surveyed the blast site.

Authoritie­s were at a loss to explain how the vehicle slipped through a gate protected by explosive-sniffing dogs, heavily-armed guards and security cameras.

President Ivan Duque rushed back to the capital with his top military advisers from a visit to a western state to oversee the police investigat­ion into what he called a “miserable” attack.

Health authoritie­s in Bogota appealed for residents to donate blood at one of four collection points in the capital to help treat those injured, the majority of who were rushed to a police hospital.

“All of us Colombians reject terrorism and are united in confrontin­g it,” Mr. Duque said in a tweet. “We won’t bend in the face of violence.”

For decades, residents of Bogota lived in fear of being caught in a bombing by leftist rebels or Pablo Escobar’s Medellin drug cartel. But as Colombia’s conflict has wound down, security has improved and residents have lowered their guard.

While authoritie­s had yet to suggest who was behind the attack, and no armed group claimed responsibi­lity, attention was focused on leftist rebels from the National Liberation Army, which has been stepping up attacks on police targets in Colombia amid a standoff with the conservati­ve Mr. Duque over how to re-start stalled peace talks.

The group known as the ELN was long considered a lesser military threat than the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, whose 7,000 guerrilla fighters disarmed as part of a 2016 peace accord.

But in the wake of the peace deal the Cuban-inspired insurgency has been gaining strength, especially along the eastern border with Venezuela, where it has carried out a number of kidnapping­s and bombings of oil pipelines. That has hardened Mr. Duque’s resolve in refusing to resume peace talks that have been stalled since he took office last August, despite a rebel offer of a cease-fire.

Other possible assailants include the country’s Usuga drug cartel, which has suffered a number of setbacks at the hands of the police, and dissident members of the FARC.

Several foreign leaders condemned the attack.

The United Nations peace mission in Colombia called it “an unacceptab­le criminal act which goes against the efforts the country is making to steer away from the violence, and work ... to build a more prosperous and peaceful future.”

Thursday’s bombing was the deadliest in the capital since an explosion at the upmarket Andino shopping mall in June 2017 killed three people, including a French woman, and injured another 11. Police later arrested several suspected members of a far-left urban guerrilla group called the People Revolution­ary’s Movement for the bombing.

But it has been more than a decade since a police or military installati­on in the capital has suffered a major bombing. A blast at military university in 2006 left almost two dozen people injured.

Ariel Avila, an analyst who tracks violence, said that in the last four years, there have been 28 attacks in the capital with explosives. While the majority has been carried out with low-grade homemade materials and grenades that have damaged property but left no casualties, he said police intelligen­ce and checkpoint­s surroundin­g the city need to be reinforced to prevent more attacks.

 ?? John Wilson Vizcaino/Associated Press ?? Family members of victims of a bombing gather outside the entrance to the General Santander police academy where the bombing took place Thursday in Bogota, Colombia.
John Wilson Vizcaino/Associated Press Family members of victims of a bombing gather outside the entrance to the General Santander police academy where the bombing took place Thursday in Bogota, Colombia.

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