================================================
                        "The leader of the group told them the world
                        was going to end in August and that they had
                        to go to the Sierra Nevada to meet some aliens."
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REUTERS

Thursday, 8 July 1999

                UFO cult members missing in Colombian mountains
                -----------------------------------------------

CARTAGENA, Colombia -- At least 100 members of a religious cult were
missing in northern Colombia after they went to rendezvous with a UFO that
they believed would save them from ``the end of the world,'' relatives
said on Thursday.

``My daughter told me she had to leave because a cataclysm was going to
occur and that she had to go to a high place to meet extraterrestrials who
would save them from the end of the world,'' Andrea de Echenique, whose
daughter, Maria Bernarda, is among the missing, told Reuters.

The followers of the so-called Stella Maris Church, which describes itself
as a Gnostic organisation, headed out to the Sierra Nevada mountains in
two groups on Friday and over the weekend.

A police spokesman in the Caribbean resort of Cartagena, where most of the
cult members lived, said they had received reports that the group had
disappeared.

There have been no known reports of doomsday cults operating in Colombia.
But in 1978 South America was the scene of the worst mass suicide ever
when more than 900 American followers of the so-called People's Temple
killed themselves in Jonestown Guyana.

Cartagena police said, however, that no search operation had been mounted
since there was no indication that the Stella Maris cult was planning mass
suicide or that any of the members had been forced to go along against
their will.

``The leader of the group told them the world was going to end in August
and that they had to go to the Sierra Nevada to meet some aliens,'' said
Pedro Perez. Four of his relatives are missing with the other cult
members.

Leaders of a Gnostic group in Bogota said it did not have any links with
the Stella Maris group but had heard reports of its strange beliefs.

``People had told us that certain practices of the Stella Maris group were
fanatical and dogmatic.... Over the last two years they had been talking
about a meeting with UFOs,'' said Wilson Martinez, a Gnostic
``archbishop'' in Bogota.

Martinez said Gnostics believed in the spiritual but not historical
existence of Christ and looked to ``free their souls with knowledge.''

Family members have accused Rogelio Perea, self-styled head of the Stella
Maris cult, of swindling his followers out of their homes, property and
money. They also say he forced members to sever ties with their families.

``The two leaders told my daughter Liliana that she was God's chosen one
and made her change her name to Stella Maris to brainwash her. She was
convinced she was going to make contact with flying saucers,'' said
Mariela Tovar.

But others close to the Stella Maris group believe its 100 or so members
have simply gone on a routine spiritual retreat and relatives and media
have exaggerated the story.

        Copyright 1999 Reuters Limited

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