A statue depicting Colombian former cyclist Luis Herrera is seen in the municipality of Fusagasuga, about 75km from Bogota. Four young farmers disappeared in 2002 during the worst years of the Colombian conflict. The alleged mastermind behind the macabre scheme is their neighbour, Colombian cycling legend Luis "Lucho" Herrera. Photo / Raul Arboleda, AFP
A statue depicting Colombian former cyclist Luis Herrera is seen in the municipality of Fusagasuga, about 75km from Bogota. Four young farmers disappeared in 2002 during the worst years of the Colombian conflict. The alleged mastermind behind the macabre scheme is their neighbour, Colombian cycling legend Luis "Lucho" Herrera. Photo / Raul Arboleda, AFP
When four young farmers were taken at gunpoint from their homes during the darkest hours of Colombia’s conflict, nobody could have suspected it would be linked to a legend of the country’s favourite sport.
But one of Colombia’s many cold cases is back on the front pages following shock newallegations: the hitmen claim that the mastermind of the 2002 abduction was none other than international cycling star Luis “Lucho” Herrera.
The 64-year-old former Tour of Spain winner, who also won several mountain stages in the Tour de France, is accused by two former paramilitaries of paying them about US$9700 ($16,200) for the disappearance and killings of his four neighbours in the central Colombian town of Fusagasuga.
The ex-paramilitaries are former members of one of the far-right death squads that for decades fought Colombia’s left-wing guerrillas.
They say that Herrera claimed the victims were rebels who had tried to extort him, when they were actually targeted because they refused to sell land to Herrera, who built up a sprawling business empire in Fusagasuga after he retired.
Last week, prosecutors announced that Herrera was under investigation over the case, which has haunted his hometown for over two decades.
AFP visited the victims’ families at the modest farmhouses where Diuviseldo Torres, Gonzalo Guerrero, and brothers Victor Manuel and Jose del Carmen Rodriguez were last seen, about 75km from Bogota.
They recalled a pick-up truck descending the steep road leading to the houses on the night of their disappearances.
Men claiming to be from Colombia’s former intelligence agency DAS then took the men away at gunpoint, claiming they were wanted for robbery.
The remains of Torres and Victor Manuel Rodriguez were found at a ranch in Fusagasuga in 2008 but only identified last year.
The other two men were never found.
Their killers, who confessed as part of a plea bargain, said they dismembered the bodies of the victims.
“I still can’t believe that people with so much power and money would do that,” a horrified Otilia Torres, the 64-year-old sister of Diuviseldo, told AFP.
Hermencia Vega, mother of Diuviseldo Torres, a victim of forced disappearance, stands next to pictures of him at Fusagasuga. Photo / Raul Arboleda, AFP
Herrera has denied any involvement in the men’s abductions, insisting the investigation is an attempt to tarnish his name.
He initially granted AFP’s request for an interview but pulled out at the last minute.
He and his brother Rafael are due to appear in court in Bogota on Friday local time for questioning.
If charged and convicted of forced disappearances, they face between 26 and 45 years in prison.
‘Little gardener’
The cyclist is affectionately known in Colombia as the “little gardener of Fusagasuga” after his humble beginnings, riding to landscaping jobs in the mountains.
His wins at several major Colombian and European events in the 1980s - notably the 1987 Tour of Spain - made him a national hero by the time he retired in 1995 to run a farm he bought near his birthplace.
Two years before the disappearances of the Fusagasuga four, he had himself been a victim of Colombia’s multi-headed war between communist guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries, drug traffickers and the security forces.
The cyclist, who owns several hotels and farms, was kidnapped for several hours by Farc rebels but quickly released amid suspicion he paid his captors a large sum of money.
At least 135,000 people are estimated to have disappeared during six decades of armed conflict in Colombia, which subsided dramatically after Farc, the country’s biggest rebel group, agreed to lay down arms in 2016.
Paramilitary groups killed thousands of people accused of collaborating with guerrillas or committing minor offenses.
Mismatched battle
During a recent demonstration in Fusagasuaga over the farmers’ killings, a group of people threw red paint on a statue honouring Herrera.
But most of the townspeople interviewed by AFP stood by their champion, saying they believed the allegations against him were “lies”.
Stella Prada, Gonzalo Guerrero’s partner, who was pregnant with their only child when he was taken away, said she was sad to learn of Herrera’s alleged involvement in the case, “because he’s not a stranger, he’s our neighbour.”
She is preparing herself for what she fears will be a David-versus-Goliath legal battle against the sports star.
Torres’ mother, Hermencia Vega, said she hoped for years her son would “come back alive”.
Recovering his remains last year brought some comfort but did not end her suffering.