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The National Institute of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences reported that 10 bodies were received at the headquarters of Villavicencio, Meta, on March 4 of this year, whose inspections were carried out by judicial police personnel in the neighborhood of Buenos Aires de Calamar, Guaviare , after a bombing carried out by special forces of the Army.
(It may interest you: The political controversy over the Guaviare bombing)
The entity also indicated through a statement that “an interdisciplinary team, made up of forensic doctors and other specialists, assumed the autopsy and the identification process of the bodies.
“The scientific work continues and the results will be reported to the prosecutor in the case, when there is full certainty about the identities.”
The information provided by third parties and that has been disclosed to the media about the identities of the bodies is not official nor has it been provided by the Institute of Legal Medicine.
The report also indicates that “the information provided by third parties and that has been disclosed to the media about the identities of the bodies is not official nor has it been provided by the Institute of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences.”
(Also read: They denounce that minors died in bombing in Guaviare)
And it concludes that “faithful to the reservation that assists him in this process and in strict compliance with the established legal protocol, the report with these details will be delivered to the corresponding authorities.”
The minister spoke
On Wednesday morning, Defense Minister Diego Molano referred to Holman Morris’s complaint about an Air Force bombing in Guaviare in which more than 10 minors had died.
In this regard, Molano has maintained that they are awaiting official reports from the Prosecutor’s Office on the identity of the people who died.
In any case, he said that this was a “legitimate action on the part of our Armed Forces” and that all the protocols of International Humanitarian Law were followed in this operation, which left 12 dead and 5 captured.
ELTIEMPO.COM