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PAINFUL WAIT

Blow to Luis Diaz as RANSOM row over dad erupts between terror boss ‘Patricia’ & guerrilla chiefs holding up freedom bid

Colombian authorities slammed the guerrilla group and said it's 'mocking' them

THE case of Luis Diaz's dad has suffered a fresh blow as a massive war has erupted between cartel boss Patricia Nevada and other guerrilla leaders within the Northern War Front over the ransom payment.

The ELN guerrillas group have been accused of "playing" with the freedom of the Liverpool star's dad who got kidnapped by the group 12 days ago.

Rebels of the National Liberation Army (ELN) patrol near the Baudo river in Choco province, Colombia on October 26, 2023. (Photo by Daniel Munoz / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL MUNOZ/AFP via Getty Images)
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The ELN rebel group has been accused of "playing" with Diaz's freedom
Luis Mane Diaz was abducted from a petrol station on October 28
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Luis Mane Diaz was abducted from a petrol station on October 28
A FEMALE guerrilla fighter known only as Patricia orchestrated the kidnap of Liverpool star Luis Diaz’s dad, it was claimed today.<br />
The veteran insurgent, said to have spent more than half her life at war with the Colombian government, has been identified as the leader of one of the regional units of the left-wing rebel group which has now admitted responsibility for the abduction after being blamed by officials yesterday.<br />
Colombian newspapers are reporting the ELN’s so-called Northern War Front, led by the 40-year-old who uses the alias Patricia, carried out Saturday’s kidnapping of Luis Manuel Diaz.<br />
A senior Northern War Front member known only as Mateo is said to be holding the 58-year-old hostage with foot soldiers under Patricia’s orders.<br />
The ELN, branded a terrorist organisation by the US government and the EU, has claimed it wasn’t aware one of its factions was behind the crime and promised late yesterday Luis’s dad would be released within hours.<br />
But despite social media speculation a release has already occurred, there has been no official confirmation and critics are branding the ELN claim as “scarcely credible.”<br />
One of the reasons they are casting doubt on the idea of a quick release is that the Northern War Front, the Frente de Guerra Norte in Spanish, has a representative at the ongoing peace talks between the ELN and the government which began after the guerrilla group called a unilateral ceasefire during the Covid pandemic.<br />
He has been named by Colombian media outlet Semana as Bernardo Tellez, which has claimed his presence among ELN representatives at the negotiating table shows the insurgents have no real desire to free Luis Diaz’s father unless they get paid lots of money to do, or the group’s leaders have little control over their regional units.<br />
The little that has emerged about Patricia, alongside a grainy photo of her in military fatigues, points to her taking up arms in 2006 and rising through the ranks of the ELN to become leader of the December 6 Front and subsequently a senior member of the Northern War Front.<br />
She is said to have spent 26 years fighting for the violent guerrilla organisation which finances itself from criminal practices including extortion and kidnapping.<br />
ELN representative Juan Carlos Cuellar, in the group’s first official confirmation of the Colombian government’s claims yesterday they were behind the kidnapping, said: “We must recognise the situation you have heard in the news is true and the ELN is going to free Mr Diaz’s father as soon as possible.”<br />
Analysts were quick to point out that unlike the centrally-led FARC, the other rebel group in Colombia fighting the government, the ELN operates as a federation with regional units enjoying high levels of autonomy and often implementing different strategies according to their local needs.<br />
Colombian President Gustavo Petro has revealed he has spoken to Luis Diaz personally to reassure him about the government’s efforts to free his dad.<br />
The Liverpool star spoke to the director of Colombia’s National Police force shortly after Luis Manuel Diaz was kidnapped on Saturday.<br />
William Rene Salamanca Ramirez told the anguished striker every effort was being made to find the missing 58-year-old.<br />
Yesterday evening, after the Colombian government confirmed the ELN was behind the kidnap, Mr Petro confirmed he had spoken to the footballer.<br />
He said on his official Twitter site: “We have spoken with Luis Diaz yesterday. We are working for the liberation of his father.”<br />
Luis’s relatives prayed for his dad’s safe return at a church near their home overnight.<br />
The father-of-four and his wife Cilenis Marulanda were kidnapped on Saturday afternoon at a petrol station in his their home town of Barrancas in the region of La Guajira near Colombia’s border with Venezuela.<br />
Cilenis was abandoned by her captors hours later by the roadside as the police and army hunt for them intensified and reunited with her anguished family.<br />
An elite police commando squad is focusing its search for Luis Diaz’s dad on the inhospitable Perija Mountains on Colombia’s border with Venezuela.<br />
Two sniffer dogs called Laticha and Tekila have also been brought in to help.<br />
A reward of up to MILLION 200 Colombian pesos, around POUNDS 40,000, has been offered by the authorities for information.<br />
Colombia’s police chief said earlier this week he believed Luis Manuel Diaz’s captors remained in the country and had not fled across the border to Venezuela as first feared.<br />
On Tuesday afternoon relatives, friends and well-wishers took to the streets of Barrancas to demand his liberation.<br />
The march began at 5pm local time and finished at the home of Luis Diaz’s parents.<br />
Locals started decking out shopfronts with white balloons ahead of the protest and preparing banners which read: ‘No Al Secuestro’ and Liberenlo Ya’ - which would translate into English as ‘No To Kidnap’ and ‘Free him now.’<br />
One local shopkeeper speaking ahead of the street demo said: “We are asking for the swift release of Mane Diaz, the father of Luis Diaz.<br />
“We want him to return to Barrancas. He needs to return to his family.”<br />
In a direct message to the captors, he added: “Please, free him. He’s done nothing wrong.”<br />
In an official statement attributing the kidnapping to the ELN, the Colombian government delegation taking part in the peace talks said yesterday: “We have today been made aware the kidnap carried out on October 28 in Barrancas in the La Guajira region, which Luis Manuel Diaz and Cilenis Marulanda the mother and father of football player Luis Fernando Diaz Marulanda were victims of, was perpetrated by a unit belonging to the ELN.<br />
“Despite Mrs Marulanda being freed hours later, the player’s father has now been kidnapped for five days.<br />
“As the government delegation for the peace talks with the ELN, we express our solidarity with Luis Diaz, his relatives, with the whole country and with the millions of fans of the footballer.<br />
“We demand the ELN frees Mr Luis Manuel Diaz immediately and we make it clear here that it is their sole responsibility to guarantee his life and integrity.<br />
“We remind the ELN that kidnap is a criminal practice which violates International Humanitarian Law and that in the current peace talks process, it is their responsibility not only to stop committing this crime but also to eliminate it for ever.”<br />
The abduction of civilians has been a traditional practice of the ELN.<br />
In January 2018 the rebel group kidnapped an oil engineer in the north of Colombian. He was named at the time as 41-year-old Andres Riano Ravelo.<br />
Two Dutch journalists were kidnapped by the group in June 2017, the Colombian military said.<br />
The ELN said in June when it agreed a ceasefire with the government that it would continue with the twin crimes of kidnapping and extortion “where necessary,” describing them as being essential to the group’s “finances.”<br />
A negotiator for the group said at the time: “We don’t talk about kidnap, we talk about retentions. If they are not necessary they won’t happen.”<br />
The Marxist-Leninist ELN, or National Liberation Army in English, was founded in 1964 by radical Catholics inspired by Cuba’s communist revolution.<br />
It was behind a car bombing in January 2019 at a police academy in Bogota which killed 21 people and injured 68 others, making it one of the deadliest attacks ever in the Colombian capital.<br />
Peace talks have been going on between the ELN and the Colombian government since March 2020 when the guerrilla group declared its unilateral ceasefire.<br />
//www.infobae.com/colombia/2023/11/03/alias-patricia-la-cabecilla-que-tendria-en-su-poder-a-luis-manuel-diaz/
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A row over his ransom has erupted between Patricia and other guerrilla chiefs
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Luis Diaz has begged kidnappers to release his dad

The Colombian government announced last night that the operation to release Luis Mane Diaz has already begun as Diaz's worried family has begged kidnappers to offer proof of life.

The 58-year-old remains hostage after he was abducted by the guerrilla group from a petrol station in Barrancas, in the northern province of La Guajira on October 28.

A potential reason for the delay could be a suspected war that has broken out between leaders of the Northern War Front over the ransom for Diaz's release.

Colombian authorities have offered a reward of $200,000,000 Pesos (£40,600) for Diaz's return.

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According to Colombian intelligence, the row has broken out between female guerrilla fighter Patricia Nevada, the person in charge of the group's finances and another chief using the alias Ronal, reports.

Ronal, operating from a camp called The Donkey, is said to refuse to hand over Diaz until a payment of "a large sum of money" is paid.

In their most recent statement, ELN blamed the delay in the release of the 58-year-old on the large military and police presence in the area.

However, following their demands for "security guarantees" around 200 men scouring Colombia's Perija Mountains for the missing man, were withdrawn to the town of Barrancas.

The rebel group admitted snatching Diaz was a "mistake" and vowed to release him as soon as possible but so far has failed to do so.

Colombia's attorney general Francisco Barbosa slammed the ELN group during a meeting with National Federation of Departments (FND) and blamed it for "playing" with Diaz's freedom.

He said: "There is the institutionality that the Prosecutor's Office is disgusted by seeing how criminals play target games with our soldiers and police in Catatumbo, or how this week our soldiers in El Plateado (Cauca) were dragged like animals by the dissidents of Iván Mordisco. 

"Or to see how the ELN plays with the freedom of the father of our star soccer player Luis Díaz."

While former Minister of the Interior, Juan Fernando Cristo said the ELN is "mocking" Colombian authorities.

He said: "The delay in the release of Luis Manuel Díaz is a mockery by the ELN to the government and to Colombians.

"They do not understand the enormous damage they do to the credibility of a peace process that they have mortally wounded." 

Colombian authorities previously seemed positive the ELN will keep its promise with the government's head negotiator with the guerrilla group, Otty Patiño, confirming the man should be freed soon.

But as days pass there is still no word on Diaz amid fears the group is stalling.

Diaz's family begged kidnappers to offer proof he is still alive as his brother said: “What we would most like is to have that proof by seeing him and knowing what situation our brother, our relative, our papa, our son is in because my father is here and wants to see his son.”

Luis Alfonso Diaz, the footballer’s cousin, told Colombian state broadcaster RNC: “We are asking the ELN to send us proof of how Luis Manuel is now so we can have some peace of mind.”

It came as the UN also joined the calls to free the footballer's kidnapped dad Luis Manuel Diaz.

The Liverpool star broke his silence with an emotional social media appeal.

The 26-year-old, referring to his father by his nickname "Mane" wrote on Instagram: “This is not Luis Diaz the player speaking.

"Today it is the son of Luis Manuel Diaz speaking.

“Mane, my dad, is a hard-working family man, the pillar of our family and he’s been kidnapped.

“I ask the ELN for the prompt release of my father, and I ask international organisations to work together for his freedom

“Every second, every minute, our anguish grows.

"My mother, my brothers and I are desperate, distressed and without words to describe what we are feeling.

"This suffering will only end when we have him back home.

“I beg you to release him immediately, respecting his integrity and ending this painful wait as soon as possible.

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“In the name of love and compassion, we ask you to reconsider your actions and allow us to have him back.

“I thank Colombians and the international community for the support received, thank you for so many demonstrations of affection and solidarity in this difficult time that many families in my country find themselves experiencing.”

Diaz's family begged kidnappers to offer proof the 58-year-old is alive
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Diaz's family begged kidnappers to offer proof the 58-year-old is aliveCredit: instagram/@luisdiaz19_
Colombian forces were told to return to Barrancas following the kidnappers' demands
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Colombian forces were told to return to Barrancas following the kidnappers' demandsCredit: AFP
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