The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Colombia vote: The spectre of political assassinat­ion

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BOGOTA: Every time Colombian leftist presidenti­al candidate Gustavo Petro, who leads opinion polls, steps out in public the scene is striking: he is surrounded by a wall of nervousloo­king bodyguards brandishin­g bullet-proof shields.

The spectre of assassinat­ion is haunting the electoral campaign in which the left has a real chance of taking power for the first time in a country that has a history of political careers ending in a hail of bullets.

In the 20th century, five presidenti­al candidates were assassinat­ed by opponents, drug trafficker­s or paramilita­ries working in complicity with the state.

Three were from the left or far left, and the other two were liberals.

The country was gripped by more than five decades of conflict between the state and the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) that ended with a 2016 peace deal.

And while the level of violence has dropped since then, Colombia remains wracked by a multi-faceted conflict involving drug trafficker­s and a multitude of armed groups.

“The spectre of death accompanie­s us,” Petro told AFP in February. “It does not stop appearing to me like a flash, when I'm in a crowd, when I'm on a platform and there is a full square, someone could shoot from anywhere.”

Earlier this month, the 62-year-old senator, a former left-wing guerrilla, had to call off a public appearance after his team received “firsthand informatio­n” about an assassinat­ion plot by two paramilita­ries.

Two days later he did appear in the northern city of Cucuta behind the bullet-proof shields.

His 60-strong bodyguard has since been beefed up while local security forces have provided extra officers for his numerous trips to provincial areas that have contribute­d to his successful campaign.

The assassinat­ion risk “is very high”, according to Felipe Botero, a political science professor at the Andes University.

“They won't just (try to) kill Petro the candidate but it is also highly likely they will try to assassinat­e him if he wins the presidency,” Botero told AFP.

His running mate Francia Marquez, a black environmen­talist, has also received threats.

Conservati­ve candidate Federico Gutierrez has spoken of his concern, not just for Petro but also himself, having claimed to have been threatened by the Marxist National Liberation Army (ELN), the last remaining recognized rebel group in the country.

“Take care of Federico Gutierrez," said former president Alvaro Uribe, who escaped a FARC assassinat­ion attempt using explosives in 2002.

In the history of modern Colombia a date that stands out is April 9, 1948 when liberal presidenti­al candidate Jorge Eliecer Gaitan was shot dead on a street in Bogota.

His murder inflamed the city and set off a bloody internal conflict that, more than a half century later, has still not been extinguish­ed.

Four decades later, communist Jaime Pardo Leal (1987), liberal Luis Carlos Galan (1989), and leftists Bernardo Jaramillo and Carlos Pizarro (1990), all presidenti­al hopefuls, were assassinat­ed.

“In a country like Colombia, marked by political violence and with the record for the murder of social leaders, we obviously take all threats against Mr Petro seriously,” said Alfonso Prada, one of the candidate's advisors. “If we hope to run the country, we need to be capable of looking after our own security,” he added. – AFP

 ?? ?? Federico Gutierrez, speaks during a campaign rally in Cucuta.
Federico Gutierrez, speaks during a campaign rally in Cucuta.
 ?? ?? Gustavo Petro, speaks surrounded by security guards with shields during a campaign rally in Cucuta, Colombia, near the Venezuelan border. – AFP file photos
Gustavo Petro, speaks surrounded by security guards with shields during a campaign rally in Cucuta, Colombia, near the Venezuelan border. – AFP file photos

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