The Oklahoman

Without conflict, Colombians vote for president

- BY CHRISTINE ARMARIO AND JOSHUA GOODMAN

For decades, Colombians voted with an eye on the bloody conflict with leftist rebels that dominated their country and politics.

But on Sunday they were casting their ballots in the first presidenti­al election since the signing of a peace accord with the nation’s biggest rebel group to end the conflict and were weighing issues like corruption, inequality, crime and relations with their crisis-plagued neighbor Venezuela.

The two leading candidates have presented dramatical­ly different visions for both Colombia’s economic model and the future of its divisive peace process in a polarizing campaign driven by a wave of anti-establishm­ent sentiment.

Leading the polls is conservati­ve former senator Ivan Duque, the protege of former President Alvaro Uribe, the chief critic of the peace deal, but surveys suggest he is unlikely to get the more than 50 percent of votes required to avoid a June runoff. He’s being chased by Gustavo Petro, a former guerrilla and exBogota mayor, whose rise has triggered business concerns he would push Colombia toward the left and rattle markets.

At least two other candidates trail within reach of obtaining the second spot and a place in any runoff.

“I want to govern Colombia without a rearview mirror, looking forward to the future of our country,” Duque said as voting got underway in the nation’s overcast capital on Sunday.

Long lines of voters gathered in Bogota and police frisked people in at least one polling site — a legacy perhaps of when voting centers were targeted by leftist rebels who considered the political system a sham.

Among the early voters was Rodrigo Londono, the former leader of the demobilize­d Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, whose excombatan­ts have formed a new political party. They put forward Londono as their presidenti­al candidate, but he dropped out after experienci­ng heart issues.

He said it was his first time voting in a presidenti­al election.

“It’s very moving because this is the fruit of a path that Colombians are building,” he said.

The election has sparked fears on both the left and right of Colombia’s political spectrum, with Duque’s critics cautioning that his presidency would be tantamount to a constituti­onally barred third term for Uribe. Though hugely popular among Colombians for improving security and weakening illegal armed groups, Uribe also presided over grave human rights violations by the military.

Meanwhile, Petro and his populist platform have drawn comparison­s from critics to the late Venezuelan socialist leader Hugo Chavez, who Petro once admired. He brought Chavez to Colombia in 1994 shortly after the Venezuelan paratroope­r was released from jail, where he was sent for staging a military coup. Petro describes himself as a “strong adversary” of the neighborin­g country’s current president, Nicolas Maduro, but his early ties to Chavez have dogged him throughout the campaign.

Wanda Rincon, 25, said she had been leaning toward Petro until a few weeks ago. She likes his policies on the environmen­t and support for the peace process but said that she was turned off by his polarizing rhetoric and decided to support Sergio Fajardo instead.

Fajardo is the former mayor of Medellin and has been credited with transformi­ng the city from a hotbed of crime into a growing tourist destinatio­n.

“They all have good proposals, but it’s a question of character and having the experience to implement them,” she said.

Petro proposes overhaulin­g Colombia’s economic model to free it from dependence on oil exports and instead boost agricultur­al production through land reform. His campaign says he’d dramatical­ly increase taxes on unproducti­ve lands to encourage landholder­s to sell them to the state. His platform has resonated in particular with young voters at a time when corruption scandals have embroiled many of the nation’s elected officials.

“For years, the only thing the right has caused us is problems,” said Johana Contreras, 29, a flight attendant. “We hope Petro can show us the way.”

In the final days before the vote, Petro accused officials of failing to address a voting software glitch that he said could lead to fraud. He reiterated those concerns Sunday after casting his vote, urging citizens to document any irregulari­ties with their cellphones.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Voters look for their assigned polling stations Sunday during the presidenti­al election in Bogota, Colombia.
[AP PHOTO] Voters look for their assigned polling stations Sunday during the presidenti­al election in Bogota, Colombia.

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