Moments of great tension, anguish and pain.
News Colombia.
Magola Valencia offered a shocking story about the moments lived on July 26, the day the tragic event that involves Silvana Torres. As she narrated in her testimony, she was in the center of the city with her daughter when she received a call from María Eugenia, Silvana’s sister, asking him to meet in the apartment. Minutes later, a neighbor warned her that there was a deployment of police and a great uproar in the block where she resided, which lit her alarms.
See: The first citizenship card issued by the Registry in Colombia: this has been the evolution of this document
Unable to communicate with her granddaughter or another daughter who lives on the second floor, Magola took a hasty taxi. “When we arrived, there were many people shouting that ‘Matten it, who dies,” he recalled. Given that scene, he expressed indignation for the desires of death he heard: “Why are they doing that? We are not God or judges to wish for anyone.”
In the midst of chaos, Valencia described that Silvana had to pretend to be unconscious to be able to get out of the place, because she was being attacked with sticks and stones even in the presence of the police. “Above the uniformed threw things,” he said. Finally, the authorities protected it and managed to get it from the site, preventing the situation from going to adults.
Regarding the minor victim of the fact, Magola reported that it was the first to be withdrawn from the house. “The girl was going like a rag doll, with the foothills hanging,” he said, explaining that she was quickly taken to the University Hospital. This image, he said, was recorded in his memory as one of the most painful of his life.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhyej17n7w0
Valencia also rebuilt what, according to his testimony, happened in the previous hours. He said that Silvana got up, bathed the girl, gave her a Tetero and fixed her carefully, leaving her “impeccable.” The little girl’s mother briefly went out to visit her other daughter, who recovered from dental surgery, leaving the door open. It was in that period that, according to Magola, Silvana closed the door, entered the kitchen and, suddenly, took a knife.
The shouts of the child alerted those present, causing the girl’s mother to return immediately. “At least he thought, something happened to Silvana,” said Magola, who believes that this change was abrupt and unexpected. His story adds new details to a case that has caused shock and remains under judicial investigation.
It may interest you:

