Church
Leaders under
Fire in
Colombia
One pastor
missing, three
others reported
killed in past
month.
By David Miller
COCHABAMBA,
Bolivia,
Christians
in Colombia are
anxious to learn
the fate of
pastor William
Reyes, missing
since Sept. 25,
even as three
other pastors
have gone
missing.
Reyes, a
minister of the
Light and
Truth
Inter-American
Church and
member of the
Fraternity of
Evangelical
Pastors of
Maicao (FRAMEN,
Fraternidad de
Ministros
Evangélicos de
Maicao),
left a meeting
in Valledupar,
Cesar, at 10
a.m. that
morning heading
home to Maicao,
La Guajira. He
never arrived.
Family members
and fellow
ministers fear
that Reyes may
have been
murdered by
illegal armed
groups operating
in northern
Colombia. Since
March of this
year, FRAMEN has
received
repeated threats
from both the
leftist
Revolutionary
Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC)
and right-wing
paramilitary
units.
Abduction is
another
possibility.
Often criminals
hold their
victims for
weeks or months
before
contacting
family members
to demand
ransom, a tactic
designed to
maximize the
anxiety of the
victim’s loved
ones before
proceeding with
ransom
negotiations.
In the past
month, three
other Christian
pastors were
reportedly
killed in
separate
incidents across
the country.
According to
Pedro Acosta of
the Peace
Commission of
the Evangelical
Council of
Colombia (CEDECOL,
Consejo
Evangélico de
Colombia),
two ministers
died in the
northern
Caribbean
region and a
third in
Buenaventura on
the Pacific
coast.
At press time,
members of the
Peace
Commission’s
Documentation
and Advocacy
team, which
monitors cases
of political
violence and
human rights
abuse, were
traveling in
those areas to
verify the
identities of
the victims and
circumstances of
the killings.
Demand for
Action
On Oct. 4,
churches
organized a
public
demonstration to
protest the
disappearance of
Reyes. Thousands
of marchers
filled the
streets of
Maicao to demand
his immediate
return to his
family. The
FRAMEN-sponsored
rally featured
hymns, sermons
and an address
from Reyes’s
wife, Idia.
Idia Reyes
continues to
work as
secretary of
FRAMEN while
awaiting news of
her husband. The
couple has three
children,
William, 19, Luz
Mery, 16, and
Estefania, 9.
CEDECOL and
Justapaz, a
Mennonite
Church-based
organization
that assists
violence
victims,
launched a
letter-writing
campaign to draw
international
attention to the
case and request
government
action to help
locate Reyes.
“We are grateful
for the
outpouring of
prayer and
support from
churches in
Canada, the
United States,
Sweden and the
United Kingdom,”
stated an Oct.
26 open letter
from Janna
Hunter Bowman of
Justapaz and
Michael Joseph
of CEDECOL’s
Peace
Commission.
“Human rights
violations of
church people
and of the
civilian
population at
large are
ongoing in
Colombia. Last
year the
Justapaz Peace
Commission
program
registered the
murder of four
pastors and 22
additional
homicides of lay
leaders and
church members.”
Some of those
killings may
have been
carried out by
members of the
Colombian Armed
Forces,
according to
evidence
emerging in
recent weeks.
Prosecutors and
human rights
groups have
released
evidence that
some military
units abduct and
murder
civilians, dress
their bodies in
combat fatigues
and catalogue
them as
insurgents
killed in
battle.
According to an
Oct. 29 report
in
The
New York Times,
soldiers commit
the macabre
murders for the
two-fold purpose
of “social
cleansing” – the
extrajudicial
elimination of
criminals, drug
users and gang
members – and to
gain promotions
and bonuses.
The scandal
prompted
President Alvaro
Uribe to
announce on
Wednesday (Oct.
29) that he had
dismissed more
than two dozen
soldiers and
officers, among
them three
generals,
implicated in
the murders.
Justapaz has
documented the
murder of at
least one
evangelical
Christian at the
hands of
Colombian
soldiers. José
Ulises Martínez
served in a
counterinsurgency
unit until two
years ago, but
left the army
“because what he
had to do was
not coherent
with his
religious
convictions,”
according to his
brother, pastor
Reinel Martínez.
Martínez was
working at a
steady job and
serving as a
leader of young
adults in the
Christian
Crusade Church
in Cúcuta on
Sept.. 29, 2007,
when two
acquaintances
still on active
duty convinced
him to go with
them to Bogotá
to request a
pension payment
from the army.
He called his
girlfriend the
following day to
say he had
arrived safely
in the capital.
That was the
last she or his
family heard
from him.
Two weeks later,
Martínez’s
parents reported
his
disappearance to
the prosecutor’s
office in Cúcuta.
The ensuing
investigation
revealed that on
Oct. 1, 2007,
armed forces
officers had
presented
photographs of
Martinez’s body
dressed in
camouflage and
identified as a
guerrilla killed
in combat. Later
the family
learned that
Martínez was
killed in Gaula,
a combat zone
160 kilometers
[100 miles]
northeast of
Bogotá.
Such atrocities
threaten to mar
the reputation
of
Colombia’s Armed
Forces just as
the military is
making
remarkable gains
against the FARC
and other
insurgent
groups.
Strategic
attacks against
guerrilla bases
eliminated key
members of the
FARC high
command in 2008.
A daring July 2
rescue of
one-time
presidential
candidate Ingrid
Betancourt and
14 other
high-profile
FARC hostages
was greeted with
jubilation
around the
world.
Yet in
Colombia’s
confused and
convoluted civil
war, Christians
are still
targeted for
their role in
softening the
resolve of both
insurgent and
paramilitary
fighters.
“I believe
preventative
security
measures must be
taken in order
to protect
victims from
this scourge
that affects the
church,” Acosta
said in
reference to the
ongoing threats
to Colombian
Christians. “In
comparison to
information from
earlier [years],
the cases of
violations have
increased.”