Those involved in the Parotani blockade execute 5 people in Pucamayu | Implicados en el bloqueo de Parotani ejecutan a 5 personas en Pucamayu

By Pedro Figueroa, Los Tiempos:

The community of Pucamayu is located in the municipality of Villa Tunari, where five people were kidnapped, tortured, and murdered. | Los Tiempos

The exhumation of the remains of the victims. | Bolivian Police

Ernesto Almaraz, one of the detainees. | Pedro Figueroa

The contingent of police officers in Colomi, yesterday. | Pedro Figueroa

The taxi driver’s vehicle, one of the victims. | Social Media

Macabre! After eight days of harsh and painful waiting, the five people missing in the Cochabamba tropics were found yesterday, lifeless.

Before their execution with a firearm, the victims were tortured for more than 12 hours in the community of Pucamayu, in the municipality of Villa Tunari, in the tropics.

The Police exhumed the remains of four people yesterday in a nearby community and arrested two of the alleged perpetrators of the multiple murder.

The Deputy Minister of Interior and Police, Jhonny Aguilera, stated that the event is related to the Parotani blockade in Sipe Sipe, where some of the Pucamayu villagers made contact with one of the victims, a former military man, who offered to sell them weapons.

The victim charged 27,800 bolivianos but never delivered the weapons, two rifles, according to investigations.

Timeline of events

The tragedy of the five people, two women and three men, began on Tuesday, November 12, when Thadhashy Félix Loroña Mendoza, a taxi driver, was called by Cristian Zerna (passenger) to travel to Pucamayu, in the tropics.

Zerna was identified by some locals as the seller of firearms but did not fulfill the sale. For this reason, he was summoned to the community under false pretenses. They told him there were more people interested in purchasing military-grade weapons.

Cristian and Thadhashy left at 6:00 AM for Pucamayu, where they were detained by the villagers, who demanded the return of the money.

In this situation, Cristian implicated Thadhashy in the matter on the same day, November 12. Faced with torture and threats, the taxi driver contacted his wife, Trinidad Muñoz Pardo, to ask her to bring the 27,800 bolivianos to Pucamayu.

In the brief phone call, the taxi driver told his wife: “They’ve detained me in Pucamayu, I don’t know what the passenger I picked up did, I need 27,800 bolivianos. If I don’t give them that amount of money, they say they won’t let me leave here.”

The driver mentioned that he was in a building with the villagers. “Also, they demand a guarantee, that my family tells them I have nothing to do with it. They think I’m an accomplice (of Cristian Zerna),” he added.

In a follow-up call, he asked his wife where she was and urged her to hurry. The communication was interrupted by one of the kidnappers, who warned that time was running out.

“His time is running out, we’ve given him until 12:00,” a man is heard saying.

After the conversation, Trinidad Muñoz traveled to Pucamayu, accompanied by her sister-in-law, Auristela Liza Loroña Mendoza (the taxi driver’s sister), and Juan Carlos Román Medina, a retired military man and family friend of the Loroña family.

The audio was recorded by the relatives as backup.

On the same day, the family filed a report with the Special Force to Fight Crime (Felcc) in Sacaba.

But despite the police warning not to enter the community, the family took the risk and entered to rescue Thadhashy.

At 11:30 PM, Auristela Liza Loroña contacted her daughter and said they were near the community; that was the last contact. The cell phones of the three people were turned off on Wednesday, November 13, at 7:00 AM.

That same day, the five people were tied up, tortured, murdered, and buried in clandestine graves.

According to the testimony of Ernesto Almaraz Chura, one of the alleged perpetrators of the crimes, the two women pleaded for their lives, saying they had children, but their pleas were ignored by the mob.

On Thursday, November 14, a group of police officers tried to enter the area, but they were unsuccessful as they were rejected by the villagers.

The next day, Friday, November 15, the families of the two women and the taxi driver approached the Special Force to Fight Crime (Felcc) at Laguna Alalay to report the kidnapping of their loved ones.

They also requested the intervention of the institutions and authorities, but nothing was done.

On Monday, November 18, the Felcc investigators and leaders of neighboring communities to Pucamayu met and coordinated an intervention.

The perpetrators of the murders buried the bodies in another jurisdiction, in the town of Villa Jorka.

Substances

Aguilera stated that there are plantations of controlled substances and undocumented vehicles in the area. He suggested that this might be another motive for the multiple murder.

One of the victims was a former military man

According to the police investigation, Cristian Zerna was known to the locals of Pucamayu because his mother, a teacher, worked in the community. Cristian lived in Parotani, where the Pucamayu villagers had blocked the area for 24 days.

Cristian, who had been discharged from the Armed Forces, presented himself as a military man during the blockade and offered to sell them two FAL rifles, weapons he never delivered.

Leave a comment