SANTA ROSA, Calif. – A group of American volunteers, most of them teenagers, were robbed by armed men while traveling on a service project in Guatemala, and were released unharmed, group leaders said Saturday.
The 13 teenagers and four adults were heading to El Salvador on Friday with the Sonoma nonprofit group Seeds of Learning when their bus was hijacked, executive director Katharine Hewitt said.
The bus was south of Quetzaltenango, Guatemala, when a car and a pickup carrying the five gunmen cut them off, program director Annie Bacon told the Santa Rosa Press Democrat.
The hijackers fired shots, boarded the bus and asked for a translator. One of the men pushed the driver aside and started driving, Bacon said.
With Bacon translating, the robbers asked passengers to hand over their possessions and made off with $11,200, which had been donated for the service project, and personal possessions including cameras and cellphones, Bacon said.
The group then headed to Antigua and was staying at a hotel there Saturday night while deciding whether to continue on to El Salvador, where they planned to build a new school, Hewitt said. Almost all the students wanted to continue, she said.
“They want to build these schools and help these communities,” Hewitt said. “They’re very concerned that they’re letting them down.”
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