Tag: Colombia

  • Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó ejected from Colombia

    Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó ejected from Colombia

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    Venezuela’s best-known opposition leader, Juan Guaidó, has touched down in the United States after being unceremoniously ejected from Colombia while attempting to gatecrash a summit about the political future of his crisis-stricken homeland.

    Guaidó shot to fame in early 2019 and for a brief moment looked poised to topple Venezuela’s authoritarian leader, Nicolás Maduro, with the support of dozens of foreign governments including the US, UK and Brazil.

    But four years later the 39-year-old’s star has waned dramatically as a result of his failure to unseat Hugo Chávez’s political heir. Maduro has crushed street protests and consolidated power. Most of the international community has abandoned Guaidó’s parallel “presidency” and “interim government”.

    And key regional powers such as Colombia and Brazil have elected leftist leaders who have revived ties with Maduro’s administration and condemned Guaidó’s attempt to bring it down by using foreign pressure to spark a military uprising.

    Late on Monday, Guaidó announced he had crossed into Colombia on foot to escape Maduro’s “persecution” and attend an international summit which Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, is hosting, in an effort to solve Venezuela’s deeply entrenched political crisis.

    However, hours later Guaidó was removed from the South American country by migration officials and boarded a plane to the US, where he landed early on Tuesday. “Unfortunately, the persecution of the dictatorship spread to Colombia today,” he said in a video statement filmed inside.

    “Guaidó didn’t say it, but everything suggests he will not return to Venezuela,” Luz Mely Reyes, a prominent Venezuelan journalist, tweeted as the politician touched down in Miami.

    Christopher Sabatini, a Latin America specialist from Chatham House in London, said Colombia’s decision to send Guaidó packing was a melancholy reflection of how dramatically his political standing had changed since early 2019, when he led huge protests through the streets of Caracas and enjoyed significant global support.

    “It’s a sort of sad coda to his so-called presidency,” said Sabatini, who said he suspected Guaidó’s decision to travel to Colombia was a political stunt designed to reassert his waning authority over Venezuela’s opposition.

    In fact, Sabatini said he believed Guaidó’s move – which he likened to a botched comeback attempt by the US actor Mickey Rourke – had merely highlighted his weakness. “It’s pure performance. He’s trying to make himself relevant again but it has the opposite effect. It makes him look sad.

    “The truth is that most of the governments that are attending [Petro’s conference] – Spain, the UK, Chile and others – no longer recognize [Guaidó’s] government, such as it was, or are now engaging with the Maduro government,” Sabatini added.

    “He’s become a little bit of a caricature, to be honest. [He has] no real authority, not much popularity. He is clearly trying to grab headlines and make himself relevant and engaging.” But this week’s drama had merely “reinforced the sense of his irrelevance”.

    Guaidó continues to insist his crusade to bring political change to Venezuela is alive.

    Before leaving the country, he had planned to take part in October opposition primaries designed to select a candidate to challenge Maduro in a presidential election scheduled for next year. That will be the first such vote since the 2018 election which Maduro won despite leading his country into one of the worst economic collapses outside a war zone in recent history. Much of the international community denounced the 2018 election as an undemocratic sham.

    Guaidó’s party, Voluntad Popular (Popular Will), condemned what it called his “arbitrary expulsion” from Colombia.

    However, Petro pushed back, claiming his country would have “gladly” offered Guaidó asylum had he arrived at an official port of entry and presented a passport.

    “There is no reason to enter the country illegally,” Colombia’s leftist president tweeted.

    “Clearly, a segment of politics wanted to disturb the unhindered progress of the international conference on Venezuela,” Petro added.

    At the opening of his one-day conference on Venezuela, Petro said he wanted to see steps to ensure its citizens were free to democratically elect their leaders. But Colombia’s president also called for an end to US sanctions which he blamed for the dire humanitarian crisis that has forced more than seven million Venezuelans to flee abroad over the past eight years.

    “We have seen it on our streets​: [Venezuelan] ​p​eople going hungry on the streets of Bogotá and Colombia. People fleeing hunger, fleeing misery​,” Petro told diplomats from countries including the US, Germany, Mexico, South Africa, the UK and Brazil.

    “​​The ​America​s​ cannot be a place of sanctions. ​The Americas must be a place of freedoms. ​And the Americas must be a place of democrac​y.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Colombia announces halt on fossil fuel exploration for a greener economy

    Colombia announces halt on fossil fuel exploration for a greener economy

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    Colombia’s leftwing government has announced that it will not approve any new oil and gas exploration projects as it seeks to shift away from fossil fuels and toward a new sustainable economy.

    Irene Vélez, the minister for mines told world leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos that the time had come for the Andean nation to move away from its reliance on oil and gas and begin a new, greener chapter in the country’s history.

    “We have decided not to award new oil and gas exploration contracts, and while that has been very controversial, it’s a clear sign of our commitment in the fight against climate change,” Vélez said during a panel in Davos on Thursday. “This decision is absolutely urgent and needs immediate action.”

    Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, made ending the country’s long history of economic reliance on oil a key part of his campaign before becoming the country’s first leftist leader in August last year.

    But a fractured congress, increasingly bleak economic outlook and a series of policy U-turns from the government have put Petro’s ambitious environmentally friendly pledge in doubt.

    The country’s finance minister, José Ocampo, has stepped in on several occasions to contradict government ministers and reassure financial markets after their comments sent the value of the Colombian peso tumbling.

    Ocampo has repeatedly told reporters that the country remains open to new oil and gas projects as it relies heavily on the sector’s revenue.

    But Petro backed Vélez’s announcement this week, saying that alternative economies would make up the loss from oil, which accounts for around half of all of Colombia’s total export revenue.

    “We are convinced that strong investment in tourism, given the beauty of the country, and the capacity and potential that the country has to generate clean energy, could, in the short term, perfectly fill the void left by fossil fuels,” Petro told reporters in Davos.

    Vélez’s doubling down on the policy has been met with criticism from economic analysts who say that halting oil exploration will not affect the global demand for fossil fuels while hurting Colombia’s economy.

    Colombia should transition toward clean energy but without “killing its golden-egg-laying goose”, Julio César Vera, former president of the Colombian Association of Petroleum Engineers, told Colombian media.

    The policy has also been criticised by environmental experts who say the move does not address the country’s key environmental issues, such as cattle-ranching and unsustainable agriculture which are driving deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, nor will it have any significant effect on the global climate crisis.

    “Colombia must not sacrifice its economic growth to make itself the champion of energy transition in Latin America,” said Manuel Rodríguez, who in 1991 became the country’s first environment minister.

    “This is a childish and populist idea based on a false narrative because according to the studies, we will lose several points of GDP while making next to no effect on the global consumption of fossil fuels. Another oil-producing country will simply make up for Colombia’s shortfall.”



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    #Colombia #announces #halt #fossil #fuel #exploration #greener #economy
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • La vicepresidenta de Colombia tiene un sueño

    La vicepresidenta de Colombia tiene un sueño

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    overrridelede230112 blesener francia 004

    Los países que han tenido esclavitud, que han tenido colonialismo son los países que tienen a la gente afrodescendiente e indígena viviendo con las necesidades básicas más insatisfechas, en situación de precariedad. Los países que fueron responsables del colonialismo y de la esclavitud son los países desarrollados, que hoy son potencias, y que paradójicamente son los países que más están emitiendo gases de efecto invernadero.

    Las consecuencias del cambio climático están afectando desproporcionadamente a esas poblaciones que históricamente han vivido estas violencias — los afrodescendientes, las poblaciones indígenas, las mujeres. También las naciones de África y el Caribe son las que están sufriendo los mayores efectos y consecuencias del cambio climático. Por tanto, hablar de reparación histórica en términos de condonación de deuda externa para estos países yo creo que es una [condición] necesaria para que puedan liberar recursos y puedan invertir esos recursos en mejorar las condiciones de vida de estas poblaciones históricamente excluidas y oprimidas.

    Estados Unidos debería liderar parte de esa política. Yo sé que han habido espacios de reconocimiento, de decir “Reconocemos que nuestra nación ha tenido responsabilidad con la esclavitud y con el racismo y ahora también con el cambio climático.” [Pero ahora] es necesario que ese reconocimiento se traduzca en acciones concretas. No es la única vía, la condonación de deuda, pero es una muy probable y muy posible. Si efectivamente hay un reconocimiento podemos partir de sentarnos como naciones a construir una ruta de reparación.

    Rodríguez: Aquí en los Estados Unidos en el 2019 y 2020 hubo mucha conversación a nivel nacional sobre el tema de reparación para los estadounidenses descendientes de personas esclavizadas. Pero ese tema ya se ha desvanecido un poco de la conversación nacional, aunque algunas iniciativas locales sí han hecho avances. ¿Cuál es la estrategia que usted recomienda para mantener esa conversación con vida?

    Márquez: Como hemos visto [con] las violencias aquí en Estados Unidos contra la población afrodescendiente, con el tema de George Floyd y otros afrodescendientes que han muerto a causa de la violencia policial o el racismo, yo creo que es un tema que debería estar vigente. A veces se coloca como tema de moda, pero después se apaga. Es difícil si no hay voluntad política de un gobierno para reconocer y avanzar la política en términos de acción.

    Desde Colombia, nosotros estamos colocando en la agenda global estas discusiones que esperamos que con Estados Unidos y con otros países podamos liderar, que podamos llevar a cabo [una solución]. Porque las comunidades y la gente siguen esperando que le reparen por esos daños. Ahora, la reparación, como lo ha hecho ver la oposición, no significa que la gente se saque del bolsillo pa’ devolverle a los que han sufrido. Significa que el estado asuma unas políticas de cambio y de transformación que van a impactar de manera positiva a estas poblaciones que han vivido estas violencias históricas.

    Rodríguez: Dentro del tema migratorio, hemos visto que más de 2,6 millones de venezolanos han emigrado al territorio colombiano por la crisis que se vive en ese país. El anterior gobierno impulsó una política de dar permisos de trabajo para los migrantes. ¿Es una política que piensan continuar?

    Márquez: Nosotros hemos definido una política clara y es que Venezuela no es nuestro enemigo, Venezuela es nuestro hermano. Una élite que nos gobernó hizo ver Venezuela como nuestro enemigo, pero para nosotros no lo es. Al vecino se le tiende la mano, al vecino no se le pone el pie en la cabeza pa’ ayudarlo a hundir.

    Efectivamente, Venezuela ha tenido problemas económicos como los tiene Colombia ahora, como los ha tenido Colombia en otros momentos. Hay momentos en los que mucha gente de Colombia migró a Venezuela, cuando Venezuela estaba en su auge. Ahora nosotros no podemos hacer lo contrario con los venezolanos que están saliendo por las situaciones políticas y económicas que ha tenido este país y ponerle el pie en la nuca como lo hizo el gobierno anterior. Esa no es nuestra política.

    Por tanto, se han ido restableciendo las relaciones. Ahora Venezuela está ofreciendo su territorio para resolver un conflicto armado que hemos tenido y que ha costado mucho sufrimiento para muchas comunidades. [El gobierno] ha puesto su territorio para la mesa de diálogo con el [Ejército de Liberación Nacional], cosa que saludamos y que nos parece muy importante y que agradecemos, que una nación como esta que ha recibido los últimos años tantas agresiones por parte de nuestros gobernantes ahora esté poniendo su territorio para resolver un conflicto.

    Esto no es una cuestión de izquierda o de derecha, es una cuestión humana. Yo vengo de un territorio que ha sufrido y que sigue sufriendo el conflicto armado, tenemos comunidades que esta Navidad no pudieron salir, estaban confinados, no tenían comida. Resolver el conflicto armado en Colombia sin duda es una oportunidad enorme para devolverle la tranquilidad y la paz no solo a Colombia, sino a la región América Latina.

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    #vicepresidenta #Colombia #tiene #sueño
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )