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Suicide Truck Bombing in Colombia Kills At Least 21

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Colombia's President Ivan Duque gives a statement inside the General Santander police academy after a bomb exploded on the campus in Bogota, Jan. 17, 2019. At right is Defense Minister Guillermo Botero and at left is Vice President Martha Lucia Ramirez.
Colombia's President Ivan Duque gives a statement inside the General Santander police academy after a bomb exploded on the campus in Bogota, Jan. 17, 2019. At right is Defense Minister Guillermo Botero and at left is Vice President Martha Lucia Ramirez.

A suicide truck bombing on a police academy Thursday in Colombia killed at least 21 people and wounded at least 68.

Colombian President Ivan Duque canceled a meeting that was to have been held in western Colombia and rushed back to visit the blast site near Bogota.

“This is an attack not only against the young, the security forces or the police. It’s an attack against society,” Duque said. “This demented terrorist act will not go unpunished.”

In this image provided by military personnel, flames rise from a deadly truck bombing at a police academy on Jan. 17, 2019, in Bogota, Colombia.
In this image provided by military personnel, flames rise from a deadly truck bombing at a police academy on Jan. 17, 2019, in Bogota, Colombia.

Kimberley Breier, U.S. assistant secretary of state for Latin America, also condemned the attack and said the U.S. sends its condolences to the victims and their families.

The pickup packed with explosives crashed through the gate of the officers’ school south of the capital, despite the entrance being surrounded by armed guards and bomb-sniffing dogs.

Colombian prosecutors have identified the driver, but no group has claimed responsibility.

In this image provided by military personnel, emergency personnel respond to the scene of a deadly car bombing at a police academy, Jan. 17, 2019, in Bogota, Colombia.
In this image provided by military personnel, emergency personnel respond to the scene of a deadly car bombing at a police academy, Jan. 17, 2019, in Bogota, Colombia.

But the ELN rebel group has increased attacks on police since peace talks stalled when the rebels refused to heed the government demand that it free all hostages.

ELN is now the country’s largest armed rebel group since FARC disbanded and turned into a political party as part of a peace deal with the government.

Despite a long history of guerrilla violence in Colombia, major terrorist bombings in the country have been rare.

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