Family members posted photos of the disappeared miners

Venezuelan officials are investigating the alleged disappearance of 28 miners, after reports emerged they were massacred during a confrontation over a gold deposit.

On March 6, Venezuela's Attorney General dispatched two investigators to the site of the alleged massacre, which occurred in Sifontes municipality in the southern state of Bolívar, reported the BBC.

The 28 miners disappeared on March 4, with family members reporting they did not return home from work at an artisinal gold mine near the town of Tumeremo.

Witnesses allege a criminal band led by a Colombian known as Hendry Norberto Bonalde, alias "El Topo," -- arrested in May 2015 -- killed the 28 for control of a recently discovered gold deposit.

According to a separate BBC report, some locals say the bodies were deposited within the mine, while others allege they were dismembered and dumped on land belonging to the gang leader.

SEE ALSO: Coverage of Mining

Francisco Rangel, the governor of Bolívar state and member of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (Partido Socialista Unido de VenezuelaPSUV), dismissed the reports as "rumors." He asserted that soldiers sent to the scene found no evidence to support claims of a massacre, and blamed the reports on "irresponsible politicians" for wanting to stir unrest.

However, Carlos Chancellor, the mayor of Sifontes municipality, called it "illogical" and "irrational" for Rangel to assert nothing had occurred. "Just because no bodies have appeared does not mean nothing happened," he told Reuters.

According to El País, artisanal gold mining is a key economic activity in this region of Venezuela, and it is also know to attract foreign workers. Armed confrontations over gold deposits are reportedly not uncommon.

Venezuela's National Assembly is due to discuss the miners' disappearance on March 8.

InSight Crime Analysis

Given mixed reports and ongoing investigations into the unconfirmed disappearances, it is difficult to ascertain the crime's potential motives and perpetrators. However, there are several possibilities.

For one, El Topo's Colombian nationality could prompt speculation over the relationship between Colombian criminal groups and Venezuela's artisinal gold trade. While Colombian criminal groups do operate along the Venezuela/Colombia border, it seems unlikely that they would penetrate this deep into Venezuela's interior. This is partly due to the presence of Colombian rebel groups the Armed Revolutionary Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia – FARC) and National Liberation Army (Ejército de Liberación Nacional – ELN) in the Venezuelan states of Amazonas and Apure, effectively providing a buffer between Colombia and Bolívar state.

SEE ALSO: Venezuela News and Profiles

Indeed, Marcos Tarre Briceño, a Venezuelan security analyst and co-author of "Estado Delinquente," told InSight Crime it was more likely the disappearances are associated with Venezuela's "mega-gang" phenomenon.

El Topo's criminal band is one of four operating in Bolívar, and rumors suggest it operates with the complicity of regional officials and members of Venezuela's Bolivarian Intelligence Service (Servicio Bolivariano de Inteligencia Nacional – SEBIN) and investigative police (Cuerpo de Investigaciones Científicas, Penales y Criminalísticas – CICPC). Witnesses have alleged the SEBIN and CICPC were involved in the miners' disappearance.

The disappearance occurs shortly after Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's creation of the "Arco Minero del Orinoco," which seeks to dismantle illegal mining networks and assert greater government control over mining in Bolívar state to help offset falling oil revenue.

Investigations

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
Prev Next

Colombia Elites and Organized Crime: Introduction

Colombia Elites and Organized Crime: Introduction

The power of Colombia's elites is founded upon one of the most unequal divisions of land in the world. As of the early 21st century, one percent of landowners own more than half the country's agricultural land.1  Under Spanish rule, Colombia's agriculture was organized on the hacienda...

Honduras Elites and Organized Crime: Introduction

Honduras Elites and Organized Crime: Introduction

Honduras is currently one of the most violent countries on the planet that is not at war. The violence is carried out by transnational criminal organizations, local drug trafficking groups, gangs and corrupt security forces, among other actors. Violence is the focal point for the international aid...

Elites and Organized Crime: Introduction

Elites and Organized Crime: Introduction

Organized crime and the violence associated with it is the preeminent problem in Latin America and the Caribbean today. The region is currently home to six of the most violent countries in the world that are not at war. Four of those countries are in Central America...

Special Report: Gangs in Honduras

Special Report: Gangs in Honduras

In a new report based on extensive field research, InSight Crime and the Asociacion para una Sociedad mas Justa have traced how Honduras' two largest gangs, the MS13 and the Barrio 18, are evolving, and how their current modus operandi has resulted in staggering levels of violence...

Bolivia: the New Hub for Drug Trafficking in South America

Bolivia: the New Hub for Drug Trafficking in South America

Transnational organized crime likes opportunities and little resistance. Bolivia currently provides both and finds itself at the heart of a new criminal dynamic that threatens national and citizen security in this landlocked Andean nation.

Justice and the Creation of a Mafia State in Guatemala

Justice and the Creation of a Mafia State in Guatemala

As Guatemala's Congress gears up to select new Supreme Court Justices and appellate court judges, InSight Crime is investigating how organized crime influences the selection process. This story details the interests of one particular political bloc vying for control over the courts and what's at stake: millions...

The FARC 2002-Present: Decapitation and Rebirth

The FARC 2002-Present: Decapitation and Rebirth

In August 2002, the guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) greeted Colombia's new president with a mortar attack that killed 14 people during his inauguration. The attack was intended as a warning to the fiercely anti-FARC newcomer. But it became the opening salvo of...

The Urabeños - The Criminal Hybrid

The Urabeños - The Criminal Hybrid

The mad scramble for criminal power in the aftermath of the demobilization of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) is over. The Urabeños, or as they prefer to call themselves, the "Autodefensas Gaitanistas de Colombia," have won.

Mexico's Security Dilemma: The Battle for Michoacan

Mexico's Security Dilemma: The Battle for Michoacan

Faced with the government's failure to rein in the criminals, communities across crime-besieged Mexico have been trying for years to organize effective civic resistance. Michoacan's vigilantes express the most extreme response by society to date, but other efforts have been less belligerent. In battle-torn cities along the...

Uruguay's Marijuana Bill Faces Political, Economic Obstacles

Uruguay's Marijuana Bill Faces Political, Economic Obstacles

If Uruguay's proposal to regulate the production, sale and distribution of marijuana is properly implemented and overcomes political and economic hurdles, it could be the most important drug regulation experiment in decades.