Iván Cepeda: "I need you to help me find those responsible for my dad's death because the State has to pay me a large sum of money... if I pull off getting that money, you're going to get a share of it." – El Expediente
Defendants: The Nation – Ministry of Defense – DAS, and others. Plaintiffs: Olga Navia Soto and others. “THIRD. Order the Nation – Ministry of Defense and the Administrative Department of Security (DAS), jointly and severally, to pay damages for moral injury—calculated at the equivalent of one thousand grams of gold—to each of the plaintiffs (Iván Cepeda Castro, María Cepeda Castro, and Olga Navia Soto), at the value certified by the Superintendence of Banking as of the date this ruling becomes final and enforceable.”
State Ordered to Pay for the Death of Manuel Cepeda - Semana
Semana: Over one billion pesos awarded regarding the assassination of former Senator Manuel Cepeda, a political leader of the Patriotic Union (UP).
The Council of State made this ruling, determining that Iván Cepeda—the former congressman's son—and Olga Navia—his wife*—must be paid 140 million pesos for non-pecuniary damages and 910 million pesos for pecuniary damages.
*Wikipedia only mentions Yira Castro Chadid as Manuel Cepeda's wife.
But the thirst for revenge by Iván and his sister did not end there: "In 2020, on the 25th anniversary of the assassination, Iván and María Cepeda raised their voices before the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) and requested accreditation as victims in order to defeat impunity." (Las2orillas)
Read the article from *El Expediente* online regarding:
"Iván Cepeda Castro built his political career on the memory of his parents as victims of state persecution. In 2010, the Colombian State was found liable by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights for the assassination of Manuel Cepeda Vargas. That is a legal fact.
What the 'Pact' presidential candidate systematically omits is the context explaining why his parents were targets of that persecution: both were active leaders of the party that founded the FARC and provided its ideological backing for decades. There is a long history behind that silence."
Iván Cepeda is called "a child of Marxism." Iván Cepeda—Petro’s candidate—grew up in the Soviet Union and Cuba, living abroad from childhood because his parents were communists. His father was an active member of the Communist Party that founded the FARC. He returned to Colombia in 1970, where he followed in his parents' footsteps: becoming a left-wing student leader and joining the Communist Youth. Later, he traveled to Bulgaria, where he studied philosophy at St. Clement of Ohrid University before returning to Colombia in 1987. He was studying at Javeriana University (Private university run by the Jesuits) when his father was assassinated. "My father's death redirected my path and made me who I am today."
Iván Cepeda’s mother, Yira Castro Chadid, was a communist and an "active agitator for revolutionary causes." She married the General Secretary of JUCO, Manuel Cepeda Vargas, in 1960, and they had two children: María and Iván Cepeda Castro. In 1964, she was imprisoned at the El Buen Pastor jail in Bogotá. It is said that they left for Cuba due to threats against her husband, though she was not formally "exiled." She participated alongside Manuel Cepeda in the Latin American Solidarity Organization (OLAS) conference held in Cuba in 1967. From there, they traveled to Czechoslovakia, remaining there until 1970. Manuel Cepeda was widowed in 1981; "at the time of his death, his partner was Olga Navia, a political and cultural activist."
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