哥伦比亚为涉嫌策划造成21人死亡的炸弹袭击男子提供创纪录赏金


2026年4月28日 / 美国东部时间上午9:41 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

哥伦比亚将提供创纪录的140万美元悬赏,征集有助于逮捕一名涉嫌策划袭击的男子的线索,该袭击于周六造成21人死亡、数十人受伤。

该国国防部长佩德罗·桑切斯表示,伊万·雅各布·伊德罗博·阿雷东多,又名“马龙”,是该国西南部考卡地区一条高速公路爆炸事件以及其他几起附近袭击事件的幕后主使。

据考卡州州长奥克塔维奥·古斯曼透露,周六的爆炸在繁忙的高速公路上造成至少15名女性死亡,道路上留下了多辆车辆扭曲的金属残骸和一个650英尺宽的弹坑。

2026年4月25日,哥伦比亚考卡省卡希维奥市波帕扬-卡利公路埃尔图内尔路段炸弹袭击后,红十字会工作人员在爆炸现场开展工作,民众在一旁观望。 JOAQUÍN SARMIENTO /法新社/盖蒂图片社

古斯曼称,此次爆炸是“该地区数十年来针对平民的最残酷、最无情的袭击”。

在桑切斯脸书页面发布的一段视频中,这位国防部长从直升机上俯瞰袭击现场,他将马龙描述为“精神错乱”的“恐怖分子”,称其杀害了“只是追求美好生活的普通民众”。

他补充道,他们将采取“一切必要措施”,确保“此类事件不再发生”。

该国武装部队总司令乌戈·洛佩斯在周六的新闻发布会上表示,袭击者先用一辆巴士和另一辆车封锁交通,随后引爆了炸弹。

该国总统古斯塔沃·佩特罗在X平台的帖子中称袭击者为“恐怖分子”和“法西斯分子”,并补充道:“我希望我们最优秀的士兵能够与他们对抗。”

2026年4月27日,哥伦比亚考卡省卡希维奥市高速公路炸弹袭击遇难者丹妮拉·巴伦西亚·奥尔金的棺木旁,亲属们正在哀悼。 JOAQUÍN SARMIENTO /法新社/盖蒂图片社

据洛佩斯透露,周六的爆炸袭击是两天内针对考卡省和考卡山谷地区公共基础设施的26起袭击事件之一。当前武装暴力是哥伦比亚5月31日总统大选前夕的核心议题。

马龙隶属于由哥伦比亚头号通缉犯伊万·莫尔迪斯科领导的武装组织。佩特罗将莫尔迪斯科描述为“伪装成革命者的毒贩”,他领导的中央总参谋部是现已解散的马克思列宁主义游击队组织“哥伦比亚革命武装力量”的多个异见分支之一。

2016年,哥伦比亚政府与哥伦比亚革命武装力量(西班牙缩写为FARC)签署和平协议,约7000名叛乱分子放下武器,但莫尔迪斯科(真名内斯托尔·格雷戈里奥·贝拉·费尔南德斯)是约2000名拒绝缴械的自封叛乱分子之一。

周六的爆炸袭击是哥伦比亚自2003年FARC在波哥大一家夜总会制造爆炸造成36人死亡以来最致命的袭击事件之一。

另一支FARC异见组织“民族解放军”于2019年在一所警察学院校园内制造袭击,造成21人死亡。

去年8月,莫尔迪斯科领导的中央总参谋部发动无人机袭击直升机并实施汽车炸弹袭击,造成至少18人死亡。

《哥伦比亚人报》周二报道称,安全部队认为,逮捕莫尔迪斯科的四名兄弟以及哥伦比亚空军轰炸导致其女友死亡,可能是近期一系列爆炸袭击的动机。该报还称,莫尔迪斯科在同一次袭击中受伤。

周六的袭击距离哥伦比亚全国大选仅一个多月,选民将在两位候选人中做出选择:一是左翼现任总统的继任者伊万·塞佩达,他目前在民调中领先,支持与游击队团体进一步开展和平谈判;二是右翼候选人,他们对武装武装分子采取更强硬的立场。

安全问题一直是竞选活动的核心议题。保守派领跑者米格尔·乌里韦·图尔巴伊去年6月在波哥大竞选时遭枪击,两个月后因伤势过重去世。

据报道,周六袭击的许多受害者来自卡希维奥镇附近的一个村庄,周一当地举行了守夜活动,数百人身着白色服装象征和平。

“求求你们,不要再有死亡,不要再有暴力,”42岁的若奥·巴伦西亚在举起遇难亲属的照片时对法新社说道。

“这类女性应该寿终正寝,”他补充道,“不该以如此悲惨的方式被夺走生命。”

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Colombia offers record bounty for man accused of ordering bomb attack that killed 21

April 28, 2026 / 9:41 AM EDT / CBS News

Colombia is offering a record 1.4 million U.S. dollars reward for information leading to the arrest of the man accused of ordering an attack that killed 21 people Saturday and wounded dozens more.

The country’s defense minister, Pedro Sanchez, said Iván Jacob Idrobo Arredondo, also known as “Marlon,” was behind the bombing of a motorway in the Cauca region, in the country’s southwest, as well as several other nearby attacks.

The explosion Saturday killed at least 15 women on the busy motorway, according to the governor of Cauca, Octavio Guzmán, leaving behind the twisted metal debris of multiple vehicles by a 650-foot crater in the road.

Red Cross workers operate at the site of an explosion as people look on after a bomb attack at El Tunel, on the Popayan-Cali road, in Cajibio, Cauca department, Colombia, on April 25, 2026. JOAQUIN SARMIENTO /AFP via Getty Images

Guzmán said the bombing was the “most brutal and ruthless attack in the region against the civilian population in decades.”

In a video on Sanchez’s Facebook page, in which the defense minister looked down on the site of the attack from a helicopter, he described Marlon as “demented” and “a terrorist” who killed “humble people who were only seeking the best.”

He added they would do “everything necessary” so “this doesn’t happen again.”

The bomb was detonated after attackers blocked traffic with a bus and another vehicle, the head of the country’s armed forces, Hugo López, said in a press conference Saturday.

The country’s president, Gustavo Petro, described the attackers as “terrorists” and “fascists” in a post on X, adding, “I want our very best soldiers to confront them.”

Relatives mourn by the coffin of Daniela Valencia Holguin, a fatal victim of a highway bombing in Cajibio, Cauca department, Colombia, on April 27, 2026. JOAQUIN SARMIENTO /AFP via Getty Images

Saturday’s bombing was one of 26 targeting public infrastructure in the Valle del Cauca and Cauca regions in two days, according to López. It comes with armed violence a central issue in the run-up to Colombia’s presidential election on May 31.

Marlon is part of an armed group led by Colombia’s most wanted man, Iván Mordisco. Described by Petro as a “drug trafficker dressed as a revolutionary,” Mordisco runs the Central General Staff, one of several dissident offshoots of the now-defunct Marxist-Leninist guerrilla organization the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

A 2016 accord between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by its Spanish acronym FARC, saw some 7,000 rebels disarm, but Mordisco, whose real name is Néstor Gregorio Vera Fernández, was one of the 2,000 or so self-styled rebels who refused to lay down their arms.

Saturday’s bombing was one of the deadliest in Colombia since the FARC killed 36 people in the bombing of a Bogotá night club in 2003.

Red Cross workers carry an injured person on a stretcher after a bomb attack at El Tunel, on the Popayan-Cali road, in Cajibio, Cauca department, Colombia, on April 25, 2026. JOAQUIN SARMIENTO /AFP via Getty Images

Another of the FARC dissident groups, the National Liberation Army, killed 21 people on a police academy campus in 2019.

Last August, Mordisco’s Central General Staff killed at least 18 people in a drone attack on a helicopter and a car bombing.

El Colombiano reported Tuesday that security forces believe the arrest of four of Mordisco’s brothers and the death of his girlfriend in a bombardment by the Colombian air force may have been a motivation for the recent spate of bombings. Mordisco was wounded in the same strike, El Colombiano reported.

Saturday’s attack came just over a month out from national elections in Colombia, in which voters will choose between Iván Cepeda, the successor to the left-wing current president, who is currently ahead in the polling and who favors further peace negotiations with guerrilla groups, or right-wing alternatives, who take a tougher stance on the armed fighters.

Security has been a central issue of the election campaign. The conservative front-runner Miguel Uribe Turbay was shot while out campaigning in Bogotá last June, and died two months later of his wounds.

Many of the victims of Saturday’s attack were reportedly from a village near the town of Cajibío, where a vigil was held Monday, with hundreds of people dressing in white as a sign of peace.

“Please, no more death, no more violence,” Joao Valencia, 42, a relative of a woman killed in the attack, told Agence France Presse, as she help up her picture.

“These kinds of women should die of old age,” he added, “not have their lives taken from them in such a tragic way.”

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