
The family of a Colombian man has filed the first formal challenge to U.S. military strikes on alleged drug-carrying boats, arguing in a petition to the premier human rights watchdog in the Americas that his death was an extrajudicial killing.
The petition from the family of Alejandro Carranza says the military bombed his fishing boat on Sept. 15, when he was sailing off Colombiaâs Caribbean coast, in violation of human rights conventions. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights received the complaint Tuesday, and while the Trump administration has said it supports the commission’s work, the U.S. does not recognize the jurisdiction of an international court associated with the commission. Therefore, any recommendations that could result from the familyâs petition would not be binding.
The familyâs attorney, Daniel Kovalik, said Carranzaâs four children and spouse want to be compensated as their loved one was their primary breadwinner. He explained that the family chose the commission because of the obstacles that a federal case would face, but the possibility has not been ruled out either.
âThe U.S. does not subject itself to accountability, so weâre using the avenues we have before us,” Kovalik said Wednesday. âWe believe that a decision in our favor, combined with public pressure, can get us that compensation and also can end the killings in the Caribbean.â
The strikes that led to the complaint
The U.S. military has killed more than 80 people since early September, when it began striking vessels that the Trump administration has said were carrying drugs toward the U.S. The strikes began off Venezuela’s Caribbean coast and later expanded to the eastern Pacific Ocean.
The U.S. also has built up its largest military presence in the region in generations, which many see as part of a strategy to pressure Venezuelan President NicolĂĄs Maduro to resign.
The Trump administration has not provided any details of the people killed in the strikes, but it has insisted that its intelligence confirmed that members of foreign terrorist organizations were operating the targeted vessels.
The U.S. military’s Sept. 15 strike killed three people. Asked at the time what proof the U.S. has that the vessel was carrying drugs, President Donald Trump told reporters that big bags of cocaine and fentanyl were spattered all over the ocean. However, images of what Trump described were not released by the military or the White House.
Kovalik denied that Carranza’s boat was carrying drugs and said he did not know if other people were on the vessel. Kovalik, who is also representing President Gustavo Petro in the U.S. after the Trump administration imposed sanctions on him, said he met the Carranzas at their home in northern Colombia.
Petro, the leftist leader of a traditional U.S. ally, has called the boat attacks âmurders,â questioning the disproportionate use of force.
Family says its received threats after allegations
The petition cites as evidence of Carranza’s killing stories from The New York Times and The Washington Post regarding the familyâs allegations and statements by U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. It also says the family has received threats since Carranza’s death.
âThe victims do not have adequate and effective resources in Colombia to obtain reparations … moreover, even if such resources existed, the victims could not exercise them safely, given that they have been threatened by right-wing paramilitaries simply for denouncing Mr. Carranzaâs murder,â according to the petition, which was first reported by The Guardian.
The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the complaint.
The attacks have increasingly come under scrutiny after the Washington Post reported that Hegseth issued a verbal order to âkill everybodyâ on the first boat targeted by the military and an admiral approved a follow-on strike said to have killed two survivors of the initial hit. Hegseth has said the admiral âmade the right callâ and he âhad complete authority to doâ so.
Trump on Tuesday said the U.S. would start doing strikes on land soon, though he didnât specify where and said attacks might occur in countries besides Venezuela, suggesting Colombia.
âYou know, the land is much easier, much easier. And we know the routes they take,â Trump said to reporters. âWe know everything about them. We know where they live. We know where the bad ones live. And weâre going to start that very soon, too.â
Later, when asked to elaborate, Trump said he was speaking about countries that are manufacturing and selling fentanyl or cocaine. The president said he heard that Colombia is manufacturing cocaine and selling it to the U.S. Colombia is the worldâs top cocaine producer.
âAnybody thatâs doing that and selling it into our country is subject to attack,â Trump said. He added a few moments later, âNot just Venezuela.â
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Garcia Cano reported from Caracas, Venezuela.
