
Dear friends,
     The police intelligence agent was  aiming through the gun slot of the guard post at the people who were marching  through Saravena on August 5.  He was crouched down below the  bullet-proof glass window and was photographing the people that were  commemorating the fourth anniversary of the killing of three beloved community  leaders.       
     An army truck then rushed to the front  of the march and several soldiers jumped out with automatic rifles.   One of the soldiers was also armed with a camera and he started taking  photos, as well.  Two soldiers on motorcycles rode through the  people at the front of the march and then roared away.        
     More than a thousand people marched  along the main streets of Saravena that day in the subversive act of honoring  the memory of Alirio Martinez, Leonel Goyeneche and Jorge Prieto.   During the early morning of August 5, 2004, soldiers took the three men  out of Jorge’s home in Caño Seco and executed them.  Vice President  Santos and Defense Minister Uribe said that the men were guerrillas who had shot  at the soldiers, and the soldiers then shot back in  self-defense.
     Alirio was the president of the state  Peasant Association, Leonel was the director of an alternative adult high school  in Saravena, and Jorge was the president of the Saravena health workers union. 
  
     A “memory gallery” was created in  front of the social organizations’ building in Saravena on August 4 (see  attached photo).  Three banners were hung from the second floor  with the names of Alirio, Leonel and Jorge.  Photos of people who  had been killed by the government security forces and the right-wing  paramilitaries were then placed in front of the  building.
     Hundreds of people gathered together  that evening to honor the victims of government violence in the state of  
     The march the following day ended at a  sports arena.  Father Teodoro and other priests from the churches  of Saravena held a mass there for Alirio, Leonel and Jorge.  During  the homily, Fr. Teodoro called for “an end to the killings, mass arrests, hunger  and poverty.”
     Three of the family members then spoke  in honor of their loved ones.  Aide was 21-years-old when her  father, Alirio, was killed.  The last time she saw him alive was in  January 2003 when she left 
     “Papa, your light shines in us, in  each of our hearts, and we will uphold your example,” said Aide.   “Today your life nourishes the ground on which the new 
     Abdon Goyeneche is a teacher, like his  brother Leonel.  He talked about his brother and he also described  being arrested shortly after the second anniversary of the killing in  2006.  Abdon was charged with “rebellion” and spent ten months in  prison.  Luis Ernesto Goyeneche, another brother, was arrested for  “rebellion” in December 2006 and is still in prison in 
     Cesar Prieto came up to the stage with  his niece, one of Jorge’s daughters.  Jorge’s son, Nelson, spoke  during the first anniversary of the killing but was unable to attend this  year.  Nelson was a leader of the Saravena health workers union,  and he was arrested for “rebellion” in February 2007 and is still in prison in  
     One of the slogans of the social  movement here is “
     In love and  solidarity,
     Scott
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
