Gustavo Moncayo

Gustavo Guillermo Moncayo Rincón (29 November 1952 – 15 November 2022),[1][2] popularly known as El caminante por la paz (Spanish for the Walker for Peace), was a Colombian teacher who in 2007 walked 1,186 km from his hometown Sandoná, in the department of Nariño in the south of Colombia to the capital city Bogotá, seeking to promote an agreement for the release of his son Pablo Emilio who had been a prisoner of the guerrilla group FARC since 1997.[3]

Gustavo Guillermo Moncayo Rincón in 2008

Walk from Sandoná to Bogotá

On 17 June 2007, which is Father's Day in Colombia, Moncayo, accompanied by his daughter, began walking from Sandoná[4] along the Pan-American Highway, stopping in every town he found on his path, to rest and to collect signatures on a petition asking President Álvaro Uribe to free his son, and other hostages held by the FARC, through a prisoner-exchange.[5]

After few days, his body started to show signs of fatigue; his and his daughter's feet had to be treated for blisters resulting from the enormous effort.[6]

As Moncayo approached the city of Popayán, his walk started to be covered by the media, and his name became increasingly well-known to the Colombian public.[6]

When he arrived in the city of Cali, Moncayo was received by Governor Angelino Garzón who offered him a place to stay. Days later, when he arrived in Pereira, he was received by the mayor of that city, who decorated him a "citizen of honour". He crossed the highest pass of the Andes before arriving in the city of Ibagué.[7]

On Wednesday, 1 August 2007, Moncayo walked the last stretch of his journey, to the historic downtown of the capital city, and arrived in Bolívar Square, cheered on by thousands of people.[8]

Uribe meets Moncayo

The arrival of Gustavo Moncayo at the Plaza de Bolívar led to a public exchange of views between him and President Uribe, who offered to declare a "meeting zone" for ninety days, in which his representatives and those of the FARC might negotiate a peace accord, but that such a step could come only after the FARC released its hostages.[9]

Moncayo commented,

Sadly, our children, our loved ones, remain there in the jungle . . . and we are in the middle of this political game between the government and the FARC.

He also expressed the opinion that Uribe's offer to the FARC was not serious.[9]

Criticism

Fernando Londoño, who in 2004, was disqualified from holding public office for 15 years by the Office of the Attorney General for conflict of interest and abuse of authority in the Recchi case, a consortium that had a contract with the Colombian State. a former conservative Interior Minister, criticized Moncayo in an opinion column for the regional Colombian newspaper El País. He accused Moncayo's son Pablo Emilio and the other soldiers defending Patascoy of being incompetent during the attack and wrote that his father was spreading "Marxist venom through Colombia's veins".[10]

Release of Pablo Moncayo

On 16 April 2009, FARC announced that they intended to release Pablo to his father and liberal Senator Piedad Córdoba as a humanitarian gesture. He was released on 30 March 2010.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.