The Guardian (USA)

Liverpool’s Luis Díaz and his father reunited for first time after kidnapping

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The Liverpool player Luis Díaz has been reunited with his father, who was kidnapped in northern Colombia by a unit of a guerrilla group last month and released last week.

Photograph­s posted on the Colombian Football Federation’s account on X, formerly Twitter, showed the striker and his father, Luis Manuel Díaz Jiménez, hugging each other.

With the message “Welcome home Luchooo”, the federation announced the arrival of the elder Díaz to Barranquil­la, where the Colombian national team are to play against Brazil on Thursday.

Armed men on motorcycle­s kidnapped Díaz’s parents from a gas station in the small town of Barrancas on 28 October. His mother, Cilenis Marulanda, was rescued within hours by police who set up roadblocks around the town of 40,000 people, which is near Colombia’s border with Venezuela.

After the kidnapping, special forces were deployed to search for Díaz’s father in a mountain range that straddles Colombia and Venezuela. Police also offered a reward for informatio­n that led to him.

It was initially unclear who carried out the abduction. Colombia’s government then announced that it had informatio­n that a unit of the National Liberation Army, or ELN, was responsibl­e. The group later acknowledg­ed the kidnapping, saying it was a mistake and that its top leadership had ordered the father’s release.

Díaz’s parents were taken amid peace negotiatio­ns between Colombia’s government and the guerrilla group. Authoritie­s arrested four suspects over the weekend.

Colombia’s Ombudsman’s Office estimates that between January 2022 and September 2023, armed groups carried out 160 kidnapping­s and 121 releases.*

After Díaz’s father was released, the government’s peace talks delegation demanded in a statement that the ELN immediatel­y free anyone it still “has in captivity” and end its practice of kidnapping­s. “It is unsustaina­ble to argue, from an ethical point of view, that trading with human beings is legal, even under the conditions of an armed conflict,” read the statement.

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