Emilsen Manyoma (1984 or 1985 - 2017) was a human rights activist from Colombia.[1] Manyoma was of Afro-Colombian descent. She worked for the "Communities Building Peace in Territories" or CONPAZ network in the Bajo Calima region of the country in Valle del Cauca.[2] Manyoma had been an outspoken critic of right-wing paramilitaries and mining and agricultural corporations.[2] Manyoma's work involved the rights of people displaced by drug trafficking.[3] She had also been working for the Colombian Truth Commission, documenting murder and disappearances.[1] She was assassinated in January 2017, along with Joe Javier Rodallega, her partner.[1] Emilsen also worked with Humanitarian Space Puente Nayero which began in April 2014 trying to create a space free from armed groups. [4]
Rodallega's mother told El País that Manyoma and Rodallega had been at home in their pajamas watching a movie with their son on the night of 14 January 2017 when they boarded a taxi, never to be seen again.[5] Their bodies were found three days later in a rural zone of Buenaventura, the city where they lived, in a state of decomposition with stab wounds and gunshot wounds.[6] Both of their throats had been slit, and Rodallega's hands were bound.[6] In the days following her assassination, the FARC issued a statement blaming Manyoma's brother Marco Antonio Manyoma Ocampo, alias Camilo Robledo, for her murder.[7] According to the statement, Robledo had deserted from the FARC with money and weapons and returned to Buenaventura where he killed his sister and her partner.[7] [8] In February 2017, Colombian authorities arrested taxi driver Julio César Valencia Moreno for supposedly participating in the murder, [9] and they arrested Manyoma's brother Marco Antonio Manyoma Ocampo a week later.[10] On 13 February, 2017, a man whose name was not revealed was also arrested and sent to prison for the same case.[11]
Her work against the interests of businesses and paramilitaries were described as the reasons for the murder:[1] Her murder was part of a series of killings of political activists in the country that occurred during the presidency of Juan Manuel Santos: at least 534 activists were killed between 2011 and 2016.[2]