April 4, 2003
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE - A man accused of threatening a Presbyterian
minister and his family in Colombia has escaped from jail, according
to the Presbyterian Church of Colombia.
Nicolas Alfonso Pezzano Bornacelly, a Colombian
paramilitary leader, was arrested in Barranquilla, in northern Colombia,
in November, 2002, and was awaiting trial for making phone calls
threatening the life of the Rev. Milton Mejia, stated clerk of the
Synod of the Presbyterian Church of Colombia.
According to the church, police tracked the calls
to Mejia directly to Bornacelly.
"The caller wanted me to collaborate (with his
group) but it was not clear how," said Mejia during an April 4 telephone
interview with the Presbyterian News Service. "Sometimes it looked
like they wanted money, sometimes like they wanted me to stop doing
what I was doing - the church's work with displaced people and other
human rights work."
The caller threatened both Mejia and his wife,
as well as their two sons, aged nine and five.
Mejia said he decided not to make the threats
public at the time so that police could quietly search for the suspect.
Mejia's lawyer recently learned that Bornacelly
is no longer in custody. Government authorities said he escaped.
"This is a very dangerous situation," said the
Rev. Pablo J. Noguera of Bogata, who is currently on a speaking
tour in U.S. churches at the invitation of the Presbyterian Peacemaking
Program. "Now we don't know what they can do against Milton . We
have to really be concerned. We have to be alert about security
for our brother, Milton."
The moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Colombia
sent letters to partner churches on April 4, including the Presbyterian
Church (USA). In the letter, the Rev. Diego Higuita asked the international
community to be aware that the church may need help protecting Mejia
and his family should "an emergency situation" arise. "For this
reason, we ask for your prayers," he wrote, adding that the church
is taking safety measures.
On another other occasion, the PC(USA) helped
finance the relocation of another Colombian pastor who was threatened.
Higuita wrote that the Bornacelly case is an
example of how "these threatening situations are handled by legal
authorities. The individual is incarcerated, and later, to our dismay,
is liberated without notice. The act is totally unpunished and the
victims remain unprotected."
Noguera said that pastors are frequently threatened
in Colombia. "The first thing the pastor worries about is the safety
of his family," he said.
Mejia said he continues to work and family members
are careful not to walk alone, but "to always be together."
"This man was caught red-handed. He should have
been watched under some kind of high-alert. But he escaped," said
Mejia.
PCUSA News Service
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