Virginia Vallejo

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Virginia Vallejo
Colombian
Occupations
Years active1972–present
Spouses
Fernando Borrero
(m. 1969; div. 1971)
David Stivel
(m. 1978; div. 1981)
Parent(s)Juan Vallejo Jaramillo
Mary García Rivera
RelativesJaime Jaramillo (granduncle)
Websitevirginiavallejo.com

Virginia Vallejo García (born 26 August 1949) is a Colombian author, journalist, television and radio director, anchorwoman,

political asylee
in the United States of America.

She is one of the most relevant media personalities of her native country, known for her interviews of presidents, politicians, international celebrities, musicians, authors and scientists.

Diana, in London in 1981,[6] and the first journalist to interview Pablo Escobar in 1983, when he was only a rookie politician.[7] She made other many type of television programs, like musical shows with the most famous singers and orchestras of her time.[8] Due to her voice, education, beauty and elegance, Vallejo has become an icon of the Colombian media, and thanks to her unique story, a contemporary legend.[9] She is now a bestseller author, translated to many languages.[10]

On 18 July 2006, the DEA took her out of Colombia in a special flight to save her life and cooperate with the Department of Justice in high-profile cases, after she had signaled several Colombian presidents and politicians as beneficiaries or accomplices of the leading cocaine cartels.[11][12]

In 2007, she published her first book, Loving Pablo, Hating Escobar, which led the Colombian Supreme Court to reopen the cases of the Palace of Justice siege in 1985, and the assassination of the presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán in 1989.[13] The book was translated to fifteen languages and made into a movie in 2018, with the Spanish actress Penélope Cruz in the role of the journalist.[10][14]

Since 2006, Virginia Vallejo lives in Miami, Florida.[15] In 2009, she became a columnist of a Venezuelan opposition newspaper, and, in 2019, television journalist for the international channel Actualidad RT.[16] In January 2024, she announced the upcoming release of her first novel of a trilogy, a saga inspired in the recent history of Colombia and her personal life.[17][18]

Early life

Family and childhood

Virginia Vallejo was born on 26 August 1949 in

minister of economy (1930);[22][23] her granduncle Alejandro Vallejo Varela, writer and close friend of Jorge Eliécer Gaitán;[24][25] and his granduncle Jaime Jaramillo Arango, minister of education (1934), ambassador to several countries in Europe, and co-founder of the Anglo Colombian School.[3][26]

In 1950, the young family returned to Bogotá, where her siblings, Felipe (1951), Antonio (1955–2012), and Sofía (1957) were born.[27] She studied first in the kindergarten of Elvira Lleras Restrepo, sister of President Carlos Lleras Restrepo, a friend of her family.[28] She then attended the Anglo Colombian School.

Early career

In 1967 and 1968, she worked as an English teacher in the Centro Colombo Americano in Bogotá and, in 1969, in the presidency of Banco del Comercio. In 1972, while she was working as director of public relations of Cervecería Andina, she received an invitation to join an upcoming television program directed by Carlos Lemos Simmonds and Aníbal Fernández de Soto.[9]

Career in the media

Introduction

Until 1998, there were only three television channels in Colombia that belonged to the Government: two commercial and one official. Inravisión, the official broadcasting entity, leased spaces to independent television producers known as programadoras, many owned by prominent journalists or presidential families.[29][30] This was the reason why Vallejo could work simultaneously as a news anchor and presenter of other programs.

1970s

From 1972 to 1975, she was as the presenter of "¡Oiga Colombia, Revista del Sábado!", a program directed by

Julio César Turbay.[31]

In 1973, she began working as a reporter on TV Sucesos-A3, the newscast directed by Alberto Acosta; and, from 1975 to 1977, she became the international editor.[32] In the early and mid seventies, she hosted other television programs, like the quiz show TV Crucigrama, a cooking show with chef Segundo Cabezas, and a program for children.[33]

In January 1978, she became the anchorwoman of

Noticiero 24 Horas, which aired at 7:00 PM, and was directed by Mauricio Gómez, Ernesto Rodríguez Medina[34] and Sergio Arboleda.[35] In March, the Government of Taiwan invited her to the inauguration of President Chiang Ching-kuo
. The same year, she was elected as the vice-president of the board of directors of the ACL, Asociación Colombiana de Locutores (Association of Colombian Speakers). In 1978, 1979 and 1980, she won the award as the Best Television Anchor of the APE, Asociación de Periodistas del Espectáculo (Association of Entertainment Journalists).

In 1979, she co-starred in the movie Colombia Connection by Gustavo Nieto Roa.[36] In November, she appeared in Town & Country, opening the section The Beautiful Women of El Dorado. In 1979 and 1980, she presented ¡Cuidado con las Mujeres!, a program by RTI Producciones, directed by David Stivel.[37]

1980s

In 1981, she founded her own

The Holy Land
.

In 1980 and 1982, she worked at

Lady Diana Spencer on 29 July 1981. Vallejo's broadcast for Caracol lasted three hours.[6] She covered the Miss Colombia pageant
for the same station until 1985.

Between 1981 and 1983, she directed her program ¡Al Ataque! She was the first television journalist to interview Pablo Escobar in January 1983. The interview was filmed at the garbage dump of Medellín. During the interview Pablo Escobar described the charity project Medellín Sin Tugurios (Medellin without slums) launched by Escobar and his partners. The interview propelled Escobar on to the national stage.[7]

In 1983 and 1984, she presented Hoy por Hoy, Magazín del Lunes (Magazine Today, Monday) at 7 pm. In 1984, she made a television commercial for Medias Di Lido (pantyhose), in

San Juan and Cartagena.[38] In 1983 and 1984, she presented the musical El Show de las Estrellas, directed by Jorge Barón.[8] In 1984, she became the international editor of the Grupo Radial Colombiano (a network founded by the Cali Cartel), directed by Carlos Lemos Simmonds. In 1985, she became the anchorwoman of the newscast Telediario, directed by Arturo Abella.[39]

In 1985, she appeared on the covers of Harper's Bazaar and Cosmopolitan. Also, in Elenco, a magazine of El Tiempo that presented her as "the symbol of an era".[40] In 1988, she won a scholarship from the

Internationales Institut für Journalismus
.

1990s

In 1991, she returned to

South American operation of a multilevel company based in the United States
.

2000s

Between 2009 and 2010, she worked as a columnist for the Venezuelan newspaper 6to Poder, directed by the opposition journalist Leocenis García; but, President Hugo Chávez closed the newspaper and jailed the director.[43][44]

2019

In 2019, Vallejo returned to her work as a television journalist for the international channel RT en Español or Actualidad RT. The twelve episodes, titled as "Sueños y Pesadillas" – "Dreams and Nightmares" in English – were inspired by the "American dream", and describe problems like the huge gap between wealth and poverty, violence and guns, LGBTQ and discrimination of gender, and the high cost of healthcare, among others.[45][46]

Exile and asylum in the U.S.

Departure from Colombia

In early July 2006, Vallejo offered her testimony in the case against

Cali cartel, Pablo Escobar's nemesis. The brothers had been extradited by President Álvaro Uribe,[48] and the trial was due to begin in Miami
in a few weeks.

Vallejo's flight made news worldwide, and a home video that Vallejo had taped before her departure to protect her life was aired by

Canal RCN of Colombia; according to the channel, it was watched by 14 million people, with higher rates of audience than the Football World Cup final of 2006 on 9 July. Six weeks later, Miguel and Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela pleaded guilty; they were sentenced to 30 years in prison, and the United States Department of Justice collected $2.1 billion ($3.2 billion today) in assets without going to trial.[49]

Loving Pablo, Hating Escobar

In 2007, Vallejo published

Cali cartels, Caribbean dictators, and the Colombian presidents Alfonso López Michelsen,[50] Ernesto Samper,[51] and Álvaro Uribe;[13][52] the siege of the Palace of Justice in 1985;[53][54] Escobar's relationship with the extreme left and extreme right rebel groups; the horrors during the era of narcoterrorism from 1988 to 1993; and the hunt for and death of her former lover on 2 December 1993.[55] Vallejo's memoir became the number one bestselling Spanish-language book in both Colombia and the United States.[56]

The memoir was translated to English and fifteen languages, in 2018.[10] It inspired the movie Loving Pablo (2017),[57] where the Spanish actress Penélope Cruz played the role of Vallejo, while Javier Bardem played Escobar. Many of the elements and characters were fictional, like the DEA agent. The film was launched during the 74th Venice International Film Festival,[58] and the two leading actors were nominated for the Goya Awards of 2018.[59][60]

Political asylum

Upon arriving to the United States in 2006, Vallejo requested political asylum. She knew that if returned to Colombia, she would be killed, like several witnesses in the cases vs. Alberto Santofimio[61] and the bosses of the Cali cartel.[62] To grant her political asylum, the State of Department and the Immigration Court of Miami examined Vallejo's life and could not find any investigation against her; only hundreds of threats from members of the Colombian government,

The Black Eagles).[67][68]

On 3 May 2010, the United States of America granted Virginia Vallejo political asylum under the

United Nations Convention against Torture. She received it due to her political opinion about powerful politicians,[69] her testimony in high-profile criminal cases, a brutal car crash she had suffered on her way to testify in the Colombian Miami consulate, and thousands of threats against her life and integrity posted under her name in the Internet.[70] Though most of them were withdrawn from the search engines in the following two weeks, they remain in Vallejo's case in the Miami immigration court.[71]

Testimonies

Siege of the Palace of Justice

In July 2008, the Colombian Government ordered Virginia Vallejo to testify in the reopened case of the

Alfonso Reyes Echandia, pleading to save their lives, and instead he allowed the army and the police to bomb a building with 400 people inside".[78][79] In her testimony under oath, she described what Pablo Escobar had told her the following year, after 10 months of separation: "The people detained after the fire, many with third degree burns, were sent to military garrisons where they were tortured – and the women gang-raped[80][81] – to find the hiding places of other rebel commanders, and the money that I had paid them to steal my files before the Court ruled on our extradition;[72] later, they were killed and disappeared in cans of quicklime and sulfuric acid."[82][83] At the end of that chapter, Virginia Vallejo summarized the tragic events: "That conflagration was the holocaust of the Colombian justice system, with the triumph of the establishment, the traditional parties, and "Los Extraditables" with Escobar at the head".[84][85]

Case of Luis Carlos Galán

In July 2009, Vallejo testified in the reopened case of the assassination of presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán[86] which occurred on 18 August 1989,[87] and signaled Alberto Santofimio as the main instigator of the candidate's assassination.[88] She described how, in 1984 and 1985 and in her presence, Alberto Santofimio had repeatedly asked Pablo Escobar to "...eliminate Senator Galan before he could become the president and extradite him".[89][90]

Verdicts

Twenty-five years after the Palace of Justice massacre, on 9 June 2010 judge Maria Stella Jara sentenced Colonel Alfonso Plazas of the army to 30 years in prison for

forced disappearance of the detained.[91][92] President Uribe attacked the verdict on television and offered his protection to the military.[93][94] The next week, with a European human rights organization, Judge Jara had to flee Colombia and went into exile.[95][96][97]

After 18 years of delays and appeals, in 2007 Alberto Santofimio received a sentence of 24 years in prison for conspiracy with Pablo Escobar in the assassination of Luis Carlos Galán.[98][99][100]

Personal life

Virginia Vallejo has been married twice to prominent and older men, the architect Fernando Borrero, a widower,[101][102] and David Stivel, head of the Clan Stivel that grouped the leading Argentinean actors of his time.[103] Virginia has often said that she would never have children.[104]

After her divorce from Borrero in 1971, she dated the future Colombian billionaires, Carlos Haime,

Luis Carlos Sarmiento Angulo
, heads of the four Colombian conglomerates.

Vallejo divorced Stivel in 1981. The following year, she became engaged to Aníbal Turbay, the handsome nephew of President

Pablo Escobar. Six months later, Virginia ended her relationship with Aníbal and began a romance with the head of the Medellín Cartel. It lasted almost five years, but was marked by long separations in 1984, 1985 and 1986. She spent most of year 1986 in Cartagena with Rafael Vieira, director of the Oceanarium of the Rosario Islands.[106][107] Upon her return to Bogotá in 1987, she ended forever her relationship with Escobar. She did it after he told her that, “very soon, would begin a war against both the Colombian State and the Cali Cartel. To crush the Government, he would use dynamite; and to finance his wars, he would use Cuba as a trampoline to send cocaine to the Florida Keys”.[50]

Since mid 1984, Virginia Vallejo has had an affair of many years with a British aristocrat, the Hon. David Patrick Metcalfe,[108] grandson of Lord Curzon, Viceroy of India, and godson of Edward VIII, the future Duke of Windsor.[109][110] Her last romantic relationship was with a German count that she has described many times as “the great love of her life”.[111]

See also

  • List of people granted political asylum

References

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External links