BusinessMirror

Ex-rebel sworn in as Colombia’s president in historic turning point

- By Manuel Rueda

BOGOTA, Colombia— Colombia’s first leftist president will be sworn into office Sunday, promising to fight inequality and heralding a turning point in the history of a country haunted by a long war between the government and guerrilla groups.

Sen. Gustavo Petro, a former member of Colombia’s M-19 guerrilla group, won the presidenti­al election in June by beating conservati­ve parties that offered moderate changes to the market-friendly economy, but failed to connect with voters frustrated by rising poverty and violence against human rights leaders and environmen­tal groups in rural areas.

Petro is part of a growing group of leftist politician­s and political outsiders who have been winning elections in Latin America since the pandemic broke out and hurt incumbents who struggled with its economic aftershock­s.

The ex-rebel’s victory was also exceptiona­l for Colombia, where voters had been historical­ly reluctant to back leftist politician­s who were often accused of being soft on crime or allied with guerrillas.

A 2016 peace deal between Colombia’s government and the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia turned much of the focus of voters away from the violent conflicts playing out in rural areas and gave prominence to problems like poverty and corruption, fueling the popularity of leftist parties in national elections.

Petro, 62, has promised to tackle Colombia’s social and economic inequaliti­es by boosting spending on anti-poverty programs and increasing investment in rural areas. He has described Us-led antinarcot­ics policies, such as the forced eradicatio­n of illegal coca crops, as a “big failure.” But he has said he would like to work with Washington “as equals,” building schemes to combat climate change or bring infrastruc­ture to rural areas where many farmers say coca leaves are the only viable crop.

Petro also formed alliances with environmen­talists during his presidenti­al campaign and has promised to turn Colombia into a “global powerhouse for life” by slowing deforestat­ion and taking steps to reduce the country’s reliance on fossil fuels.

The incoming president has said Colombia will stop granting new licenses for oil exploratio­n and will ban fracking projects, even though the oil industry makes up almost 50% of the nation’s legal exports. He plans to finance social spending with a $10 billion a year tax reform that would boost taxes on the rich and do away with corporate tax breaks.

Petro has also said he wants to start peace talks with remaining rebel groups that are currently fighting over drug routes, gold mines and other resources abandoned by the FARC after their peace deal with the government.

“He’s got a very ambitious agenda,” said Yan Basset, a political scientist at Bogota’s Rosario University. “But he will have to prioritize. The risk Petro faces is that he goes after too many reforms at once and gets nothing” through Colombia’s congress.

At least 10 heads of state are expected to attend Petro’s inaugurati­on, which will take place at a large colonial-era square in front of Colombia’s Congress. Stages with live music and big screens will also be placed in parks across Bogota’s city center so that tens of thousands of citizens without invitation­s to the main event can also join in the festivitie­s. That’s a big change for Colombia where previous presidenti­al inaugurati­ons were more somber events limited to a few hundred VIP guests.

“We want the Colombian people to be the protagonis­ts,” Petro’s press chief, Marisol Rojas, said in a statement. “This inaugurati­on will be the first taste of a new form of governing, where all forms of life are respected, and where everyone fits in.”

 ?? AP Photo/fernando Vergara ?? Colombia’s President-elect Gustavo Petro speaks to students at Externado University in bogota, Colombia on July 26, 2022. Petro gave a talk to students at his alma mater where he studied economics, ahead of his aug. 7 inaugurati­on.
AP Photo/fernando Vergara Colombia’s President-elect Gustavo Petro speaks to students at Externado University in bogota, Colombia on July 26, 2022. Petro gave a talk to students at his alma mater where he studied economics, ahead of his aug. 7 inaugurati­on.

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