A family condemns the United States in the Inter-American Court after a fisherman disappeared in an attack in the Caribbean

Lizbeth Perez, Alejandro Carranza's niece, spoke to BBC News Mundo in mid-November.

credit, BBC/Paulo Cuba

Image caption, Lizbeth Perez, Alejandro Carranza’s niece, spoke to BBC News Mundo in mid-November.

    • author, Jose Carlos Cueto
    • scroll, BBC News Mundo correspondent in Colombia
    • author, Ion Wells
    • scroll, BBC News South America correspondent

The family of Alejandro Carranza, a Colombian who was allegedly killed during a US attack on a ship in the Caribbean, has filed a complaint with the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR), in Washington, D.C. (USA).

The British newspaper The Guardian published the information, which was confirmed by BBC News Mundo (BBC Spanish service) through lawyer and activist Daniel Kovalik, the legal representative of the family and Colombian President Gustavo Petro, a critic of the policies of his American colleague Donald Trump.

The complaint was filed: “On September 15, 2025, the US military bombed the boat of Alejandro Carranza Medina (…) which was sailing in the Caribbean from the coast of Colombia. Carranza died during the bombing.”

At least 83 people have died since September in attacks ordered by the Trump administration against ships in the Caribbean and South Pacific allegedly loaded with drugs, as part of a campaign against drug trafficking.

The US government justifies the military campaign as necessary to save American lives by preventing drugs from entering the country.