
Dear  friends,
     
More than 2,000 students and teachers  marched through the streets of Puerto Berrio on March 17 to protest the killing  of a teacher and his wife.  Duvian Rojo  and Veronica Cadavid were killed by two gunmen in the center of town on the  evening of March 13.  Puerto Berrio is  controlled by paramilitary death squads that have relations with the police and  military, and the killing occurred just two blocks from the police station.  Duvian and Veronica were the parents of twins  that are less than a year old.
     
The paramilitaries have been extorting  more than 20 teachers in the town – demanding that they pay protection money in  order to avoid being killed.  Duvian  filed a complaint with the prosecutor’s office that led to the arrest of two  men, although none of the paramilitary leaders were arrested.  His colleagues believe that he was killed in  retaliation for speaking out about the extortions.  
     
I felt a lot of tension at the beginning  of the march, more so than at any other activity I’ve accompanied here in  Colombia.  I asked the parish priest, who  had invited us to the march, if I could take some photos.  He responded that it would be better if I did  not.  One of my teammates, who had been  married by the priest, talked to him later and he agreed to let me get some  shots.  I was introduced to a man who  then walked with me to the front of the march.   The march stretched out for several blocks and it was very inspiring to  see so many students in the streets of Puerto Berrio.       
     
We met with a group of teachers after the  march in the church, Our Lady of Sorrows.   One man was wearing a t-shirt with a photo of Duvian that read, “Friend  Duvian, you will always be in our hearts.”   The teachers were very concerned about their safety and asked us to not  mention their names.  “You wonder if  you’ll be the next victim,” one of them told us.
     
They described the relationship of the  paramilitaries with the police and military.   “These groups are mixed together with the authorities.”  They also talked about the location of the  killing – two policemen are usually stationed there and it’s near the  station.  “They (the killers) exited to  the left and the police came in from the right.”   
     Puerto Berrio is a town of 50,000  inhabitants, located two hours south of Barrancabermeja.  Two paramilitary groups are fighting for  control of the cocaine trade in the region, and one of those groups has  apparently entered into an alliance with the National Army of Liberation (ELN)  guerrillas.  The priest told us that  three to four people were killed each week in Puerto Berrio during  February.  In the midst of all this, the  teachers are determined to continue forward and to denounce the abuses that  occur in their town.
     
Sister Miriam accompanies workers in the palm  oil plantations near Barrancabermeja.   During the meeting with the teachers, she said “Peace can appear to be a  distant dream.  However, there are new  sprouts and signs of hope.  We’re weaving  together networks of people.”
     
In love and  solidarity,
     
Scott
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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