Kuwait Times

Colombia’s leftist pres sworn in

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BOGOTA, Colombia: Ex-guerrilla and former mayor Gustavo Petro will be sworn in Sunday as Colombia’s first-ever leftist president, with plans for profound reforms in a country beset by economic inequality and drug violence.

The former senator, 62, takes over from the deeply unpopular Ivan Duque for a four-year term during which he will enjoy support from a left-leaning majority in Congress. Petro’s hard-fought victory in June elections brought Colombia, long ruled by a conservati­ve elite, into an expanding left-wing fold in Latin America that could be consolidat­ed in October with a likely victory for Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in Brazil.

At a ceremony in Bogota on the eve of his inaugurati­on, Petro said his government would aim to “bring to Colombia what it has not had for centuries, which is tranquilit­y and peace.” “Here begins a government that will fight for environmen­tal justice,” he added.

On the campaign trail, Petro had promised to raise taxes on the rich, invest in health care and education, and reform the police after a brutal crackdown on anti-inequality protests last year that was internatio­nally condemned.

He has vowed to suspend oil exploratio­n, to promote clean energy and to reactivate diplomatic and commercial relations with the government of Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela, suspended since 2019. Petro starts from an “enviable position, with a large majority in Congress and, in terms of the street, with support that no government had in recent years,” analyst Jorge Restrepo of the Resource Center for Conflict Analysis (Cerac) told AFP.

‘Critical’ debt burden

Petro’s presidency is historic in another sense, too: by his side will be the country’s first-ever AfroColomb­ian woman vice-president, environmen­tal and

women’s rights activist Francia Marquez, 40. The pair will grapple with an economy reeling from the coronaviru­s pandemic, a spike in violence and deep-rooted anger at the political establishm­ent that culminated in last year’s protests.

Almost 40 percent of Colombia’s 50 million people live in poverty, while 11.7 percent are unemployed. Inflation reached 10.2 percent year-on-year in July. On Monday, a preparator­y commission set up by Petro said he was inheriting “a level of indebtedne­ss and fiscal deficit that... is critical.”

Petro, who in his youth was a member of the M-19 urban guerrilla group, has promised to implement outstandin­g provisions of the 2016 peace agreement that saw the rebel FARC movement lay down arms after nearly six decades of civil conflict. The former mayor of Bogota has also vowed to pursue negotiatio­ns with the National Liberation Army (ELN) armed group. Despite the FARC disbanding to become a political party, Colombia has seen a surge in violence as thousands of dissidents battle the ELN and powerful cartels for control of drug fields, illegal gold mines and lucrative smuggling routes. — AFP

 ?? ?? BOGOTA, Colombia: Colombia’s President-elect Gustavo Petro (R) greeting Costa Rica’s President Rodrigo Chaves, who arrived in the country to attend his inaugurati­on, in Bogota. —AFP
BOGOTA, Colombia: Colombia’s President-elect Gustavo Petro (R) greeting Costa Rica’s President Rodrigo Chaves, who arrived in the country to attend his inaugurati­on, in Bogota. —AFP

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