# [WARNING] Second Explosive School Bus Attack Hits Colombian Army in Palmira

*Saturday, April 25, 2026 at 4:14 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-25T04:14:31.942Z (12d ago)
**Tags**: Colombia, Terrorism, LatinAmerica, Army, VBIED, Security
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4641.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Around 21:04 local time on 24 April 2026 (circa 2026-04-25 02:04 UTC), a second explosive-laden school bus attack struck near the Agustín Codazzi Army Battalion in Palmira, Valle del Cauca, Colombia. Security camera footage shows two powerful blasts, confirming a repeat, coordinated targeting of Colombian military units in the same department. This marks a notable escalation in terror-style tactics against the state and could destabilize a core economic region if attacks persist.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

Open-source reporting from Colombian outlets and social media indicates that on the night of Friday, 24 April 2026, at approximately 21:04 local time (UTC-5), a vehicle—described in multiple posts as a school minibus loaded with explosives—detonated in the vicinity of the Batallón de Infantería Agustín Codazzi in Palmira, Valle del Cauca. Report 4 references timestamped security camera footage capturing the exact moment two strong explosions occurred. Report 5 characterizes this as the second such attack in Valle del Cauca using an explosive-laden school bus, explicitly framing it as a terrorist act aimed at the National Army.

This follows an earlier incident already noted in our existing alerts: an explosive-laden school bus attack on a Colombian Army base in Palmira. The new reporting in the last 30 minutes confirms that at least one additional, significant explosion event has occurred, with two distinct blasts near the same or closely related military installation. Casualty figures are not yet available in these snippets, but the language used by local sources clearly indicates a deliberate attack against the military, not an accidental detonation.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

The primary target is the Colombian National Army, specifically units based at the Agustín Codazzi Battalion in Palmira. Valle del Cauca has historically seen activity from FARC dissident factions, ELN elements, and criminal organizations linked to narcotrafficking. While no group is named or has claimed responsibility in these posts, the MO—using vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices (VBIEDs) disguised as civilian school buses—suggests a level of planning consistent with organized armed groups, not lone actors.

On the government side, response will be led by the Colombian Ministry of Defense, the National Army’s regional command, and national police and intelligence services (DIPOL, DNI). Given the repeated nature of the attacks, we should expect rapid tasking of military intelligence and counterterror/counterinsurgency units to identify the responsible network.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The repeated use of explosive-laden school buses in Valle del Cauca indicates a tactical shift toward high-visibility, high-impact attacks against fixed military positions in an economically critical department. The immediate effects include:

- Increased force protection measures at bases across Valle del Cauca and potentially neighboring departments (Cauca, Nariño, Huila).
- Heightened checkpoints and vehicle screening around military installations, which may extend to key roads and urban perimeters in Cali and Palmira.
- Potential retaliatory operations by the Army against suspected insurgent or criminal strongholds.

The psychological impact is considerable: using school buses as VBIEDs is designed to erode public trust and create fear by co-opting civilian symbols. If a specific group claims responsibility and frames these as part of a broader campaign, Colombia could see a short- to medium-term uptick in asymmetric attacks on security forces.

4. Market and economic impact

Immediate direct impact on global markets is limited. However, Valle del Cauca, with Palmira and nearby Cali, is a major logistics and agro-industrial hub, connected to the Port of Buenaventura—Colombia’s main Pacific port. Key implications:

- Sovereign risk and FX: If attacks persist or spread, markets may reprice Colombian political and security risk. That could pressure the Colombian peso (COP) and widen CDS spreads, particularly if investors fear renewed insurgent or narco-violence reminiscent of earlier decades.
- Local debt and equities: Colombian bank and infrastructure names, as well as local utilities and transport/logistics firms, could face modest downside if security operations disrupt business or transport corridors.
- Trade flows: Should the security situation deteriorate along routes to Buenaventura, there could be delays in export/import flows, affecting regional trade with Asia and the Pacific. At this stage, there is no evidence of direct impact on ports or major highways, but this is a key watchpoint.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- The Colombian government is likely to issue official casualty figures and a formal statement specifying whether this Palmira incident is distinct from, or an extension of, the initial bus attack already reported.
- Attribution: Authorities will likely name suspected groups or individuals based on intelligence and forensics. A public claim of responsibility by FARC dissidents, ELN, or an organized criminal group is possible.
- Security posture: Expect increased security alerts in Valle del Cauca and potentially nationwide guidance on vehicle checks around military and police facilities.
- Political reaction: Opposition and government figures may use the incident to argue for either a hardline security response or renewed negotiations with insurgent elements, which could affect Colombia’s internal policy trajectory.

Watchpoints for escalation include any follow-on attacks on civilian infrastructure (bridges, energy assets, police stations) or near major urban centers and trade routes. At present, this is a serious but localized escalation in Colombia’s internal security environment, warranting close monitoring but not yet constituting a broader regional destabilization.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Limited immediate global market impact, but sustained or escalating attacks in Valle del Cauca could raise Colombian risk premia, pressure COP and local sovereign debt, and marginally weigh on Andean equity sentiment. If attacks spread to key infrastructure (ports, energy, logistics), this could affect regional trade flows and EM credit spreads.
