Machuca Massacre

Mass murder of Colombian civilians by far-left guerillas
Machuca massacre
LocationMachuca, Antioquia Department, Colombia
Date18 October 1998
2:00 am
Attack type
shooting, mass murder, massacre
Deaths70
Injured30+
Perpetrators ELN
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Colombian conflict
1960s
  • Soberanía
1970s
  • Anorí
1980s
1990s
  • Traira
  • Villatina massacre
  • Bogota
  • La Gabarra massacre
  • Siege of Las Delicias
  • Mapiripán massacre
  • El Aro massacre
  • Machuca massacre
  • Siege of Mitú
  • Villanueva massacre
  • Nudo de Paramillo
  • Gutiérrez
  • Dabeiba
2000s
2010s
2020s
See also

The Machuca massacre (Spanish: La Masacre de Machuca) was a massacre that took place in the Colombian village of Machuca, near Segovia, Antioquia. Guerillas belonging to the National Liberation Army (ELN) dynamited an oil pipeline which caused a spreading fire to the village. Seventy people lost their lives, many of them children.

Details

On October 18, 1998, members of the Cimarrones sub-group of the ELN bombed a section of the Ocensa pipeline in Antioquia Department. The blast caused a fireball of crude oil that engulfed the village of Machuca.[1] At first, at least forty were believed to be killed.[2] The death rate eventually hit 70. It was one of the deadliest incidents to civilians in the three decade long Colombian conflict.[3]

Aftermath

The ELN took responsibility for the bombing, but not the deaths. It said that the Colombian army were the ones who ignited the spilled oil. The head of the Colombian armed forces condemned the ELN.[3]

On November 12, Nicolas Rodriguez, head of the ELN, said that the attack was a "grave mistake" and that they would investigate those responsible. State defence chiefs denied the allegations.[4] The bombing hurt the credibility of the ELN, especially as it entered peace negotiations with the government just a week prior to the attack.[5]

The pipeline was operated by British Petroleum (BP). The Guardian reported that BP provided arms equipment to the Colombian army brigade guarding the pipeline, a claim it denied.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "BBC News - AMERICAS - Guerrillas bomb Colombian pipeline". news.bbc.co.uk.
  2. ^ Schemo, Diana Jean. "Oil Pipeline Blast and Fire in Colombia Kill 45, Mostly Villagers; Rebels Are Blamed". The New York Times.
  3. ^ a b "Death and peace?". The Economist.
  4. ^ Cova, Antonio de la. "Colombia rebel admits oil pipeline bombing mistake". www.latinamericanstudies.org.
  5. ^ "41 die as rebels bomb pipeline". Independent.co.uk.
  6. ^ "BBC News - Americas - Colombia pipeline blast kills 30". news.bbc.co.uk.
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Colombian conflict (1964–present)

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