Paraguayans call for release of kidnapped ex-VP Óscar Denis
- Published
Hundreds of cars joined a protest caravan in Paraguay on Sunday to demand the release of former Vice-President Óscar Denis.
Mr Denis, 74, was kidnapped along with one of his employees on Wednesday by members of the Marxist Paraguayan People's Army (EPP) rebel group.
The EPP wants the government to free two of their jailed leaders in return for Mr Denis's release.
A deadline set by the rebels for the government to free the two has expired.
In a pamphlet, the Paraguayan People's Army (EPP) said it would give the government until 22:00 local time on Sunday (02:00GMT) to release Carmen Villalba and Alcides Oviedo.
Villalba and Oviedo were sentenced earlier this year for the attempted murder of three police officers during a foiled jailbreak in 2004. They were both already serving long sentences for kidnapping.
What is the EPP?
It is a small Marxist rebel group founded in the 1990s
It has carried out a string of kidnappings and killings in Paraguay
One of the group's main sources of income is the smuggling of marijuana and ransoms paid for those it has kidnapped
The rebels have displaced scores of Mennonite settlers from an area they seek to control
Paraguayan Interior Minister Euclides Acevedo earlier said that the state would not enter into negotiations about "matters of public security".
As well as the release of Villalba and Oviedo, the EPP has demanded that Mr Denis's family hand out food worth $2m (£1.6m) to 40 communities in the region where the rebels are active, and that they distribute the group's propaganda material.
The EPP has so far ignored the demand by Mr Denis's family for a proof of life of the former vice-president.
Mr Denis and his employee, 21-year-old Adelio Mendoza, disappeared on Wednesday from a cattle ranch the former vice-president owns near the city of Yby Yaú.
The kidnapping came a week after two 11-year-old girls were shot in Yby Yaú during a raid by the Paraguayan security forces on a EPP rebel camp.
Two of Mr Denis's three daughters attended the protest caravan in the central city of Concepción on Sunday. They said they were worried about the health of Mr Denis's 94-year-old mother, who had not stopped asking about her son's whereabouts.
Those who took part in the protest called for an end to all kidnappings in Paraguay and the release not just of Mr Denis and Mr Mendoza but also of 70-year-old rancher Félix Urbieta and police officer Edelio Morínigo, who were kidnapped in October 2016 and July 2014.
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