Sunday, October 12, 2025

Jailed founder of Tren de Aragua gang calls for peace talks with Colombian government

Larry Alvarez, a jailed founder of the notorious Tren de Aragua gang known by his alias "Larry Changa", has published a letter asking Colombian President Gustavo Petro to open peace talks leading to the transnational group's "demobilisation".



Issued on: 12/10/2025 
By: FRANCE 24


US Drug Enforcement agents and Colombian police escort an alleged member of the Tren de Aragua transnational gang into a police station in Bogota, on February 6, 2025. © Fernando Vergara, AP

A founder of Tren de Aragua, a transnational gang founded in Venezuela, has asked Colombia's government for peace talks leading to the group's disbandment, according to a letter published Saturday.

In the letter to the peace commissioner of Colombia – where he is in prison – Larry Alvarez, alias "Larry Changa," asks to help "facilitate rapprochement and build a viable demobilisation route."

The letter, also addressed to President Gustavo Petro and the ministry of justice, was signed by Alvarez's lawyers and published in local media and online.

The Colombian peace commissioner's office confirmed the authenticity of the letter to AFP.

Founded in a Venezuelan prison, Tren de Aragua is now present in eight countries and was designated a "significant transnational criminal organization" by the United States last year.

The letter includes a request to pause Alvarez's extradition to Chile, where he faces charges of terrorism, arms trafficking, extortion and kidnapping.

Colombia's leftist President Gustavo Petro entered office in 2022 pledging to end armed conflict that has dragged on in Colombia despite a landmark peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in 2016.

But proposed peace talks with National Liberation Army (ELN), the Gulf Clan cartel and FARC splinter groups have gone nowhere, and analysts say the groups, funded by drug trafficking, have grown stronger.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

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