Los Angeles Times

Colombia may have signed a peace deal, but activists keep getting killed

BOGOTA, Colombia - The killers found Hugo Albeiro George Perez sitting and chatting at a fruit juice stand. It was May 2, and he had been protesting against construction of a massive hydroelectric project in northern Colombia.

George, 48, was fatally shot in the back, according to his widow, Carmen. His nephew, Dilmar Zapata, was also killed.

"Hugo talked a lot to the news media and became a target," Carmen George said in an interview in Medellin, about 100 miles south of where the killing happened, in the hilly river town of Puerto Valdivia.

The deaths

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times1 min readInternational Relations
Pomona College Moves Graduation Ceremony To LA After Protesters Occupy Stage
LOS ANGELES — Pomona College has moved Sunday's commencement ceremony 30 miles away to the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, after pro-Palestine protesters set up an encampment this week on the ceremony stage. Tickets will be required to attend the 6
Los Angeles Times2 min read
3 Killed In Single-car Crash In Pasadena That Knocked Out Power To Hundreds
LOS ANGELES — Three people were killed and three others seriously injured in a single-car crash that temporarily knocked out power for hundreds of Pasadena residents early Saturday, authorities said. A Tesla Model 3 sedan was traveling westbound on F
Los Angeles Times2 min readInternational Relations
Burning Man, Home Of 'Radical Self Expression,' Removes Pro-Palestinian Sculpture From Its Website
The debates and protests sparked by Israel's war in the Gaza Strip have worked their way into seemingly every corner in the world — even the free-spirited desert festival in Nevada known as Burning Man. Organizers of the festival, where "radical self

Related Books & Audiobooks