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Posts Tagged ‘Colombia’

Regional battle

Honduras has been in crisis ever since President Manuel Zelaya was ousted by opponents who objected to his proposals for constitutional change.

The conflict reflects the battle between left and right that is raging throughout Latin America, argues George Philip, Professor of Comparative and Latin American Politics at the London School of Economics.

Ousted Honduras President Manuel Zelaya and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

In Latin America, as elsewhere, constitutional conflicts tend to reflect battles for power.

The crisis in Honduras, triggered when Mr Zelaya sought to amend the constitution to allow presidential re-election, also appears to follow this pattern.

For some people, most prominently Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, the conflict in Honduras is a battle between left and right.

According to this interpretation, the left, led by Mr Zelaya, is seeking a strong presidency able to lead a process of political and social transformation, while conservatives, like Roberto Micheletti, the interim president of Honduras, want a weaker executive, amply checked by the congress and the courts.

The conflict over presidential term limits, though not the only factor in making or inhibiting a strong presidency, at least partially reflects this difference of viewpoint.

The United States has a somewhat different perspective.

President Barack Obama is trying to show that his government is committed to democratic governance in Latin America whoever is involved.

He has pointedly been refusing to engage in a duel with Hugo Chavez, whether over Honduras or anything else.

For Mr Obama, the key issue is legitimation. He wants the US government to lose its historical reputation as a regional bully.

But Mr Obama wants to be a non-interventionist and a promoter of democracy as well as a good neighbour. Institutional conflicts within Latin America may make this more difficult.

Second terms

The issue of presidential re-election has recently become salient across the region.

Although all countries’ stories are different, there have already been a number of votes relating directly or indirectly to this issue.

"The slogan of the Mexican Revolution – ‘sufragio efectivo, no re-eleccion’ (an effective vote and no re-election) – was seen as democratising"

Historically, the idea of no re-election was intended to limit the advantages of presidential incumbency in countries where other forms of political accountability were weak.

Originally, presidents could do pretty much what they liked so long as they kept sufficient support within the military.

The slogan of the Mexican Revolution – ‘sufragio efectivo, no re-eleccion’ (an effective vote and no re-election) – was seen as democratising.

When democracy once again started to take root in Latin America in the 1980s, most national constitutions forbade immediate re-election, with second terms not permitted until after a waiting period, if at all.

The 1980s were a bad economic decade for Latin America and few incumbents had any prospect of re-election. The issue therefore tended to be put on hold.

In the 1990s, though, when the regional economy started to pick up, it returned with a vengeance.

Popular votes

Peru’s President Alberto Fujimori closed the national congress in 1992, organised elections for a new constituent assembly and had the new constitution approved by national plebiscite.

This new constitution, unlike the old, permitted a second consecutive election and Mr Fujimori stood again for election in 1995 and won.

His attempt to run for a third time, however, ended in disaster.

Constitutional changes during the 1990s also permitted a second consecutive presidential term in both Argentina and Brazil.

Argentine President Carlos Menem, once re-elected, considered running for a third term but then drew back.

Former Argentinian President Juan Peron

In Colombia, the constitution has recently been changed to allow a second consecutive term and there are suggestions that President Alvaro Uribe is considering asking to be allowed to run yet again.

The issue of re-election became more politically polarising once Hugo Chavez was elected in Venezuela.

Mr Chavez used a series of plebiscites to bypass the existing congress and change the constitution.

The new constitution extended the presidential term from five years to six and permitted a single re-election.

Things changed further after Mr Chavez was successfully re-elected in 2006. He then called for a plebiscite on permitting a third presidential term.

He lost the initial vote in 2007 but then called a fresh vote on basically the same issue (there were a few differences) earlier this year, which he won.

The pattern of an incumbent president calling for a new constitution to strengthen the power of the presidency and permit a second term (or more) has also been adopted by Mr Chavez’s main South American allies – Evo Morales in Bolivia and Rafael Correa in Ecuador.

Now we have the crisis in Honduras, and Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega has also just recently called for a change in the national constitution to permit presidential re-election.

It may seem anomalous that the re-election issue is so widely seen as important within Latin America.

There are, after all, ways of bypassing it. One is to use presidential relatives.

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner was elected to the presidency of Argentina in 2007, following on immediately from her husband’s term.

Argentina’s Juan Peron was replaced as president by his wife Isabel upon his death in 1974, though her term was brief and disastrous.

However, Honduras’s particular conflict, while it has an institutional aspect, can also be seen as a further round in the conflict between Mr Chavez (and his supporters) and the region’s conservatives. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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Colombia extradites Farc captor

Police escort Cesar to his plane at Bogota's Catam airport, 16 July

Colombia has extradited to the US a rebel leader who held political hostages, among them Franco-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt.

Gerardo Aguilar Ramirez, alias Cesar, a former top Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) commander, faces charges of trafficking drugs to the US.

Cesar was duped in July 2008 into handing over his hostages to undercover soldiers and getting captured himself.

He is accused of guarding 15 of the Farc’s highest-profile hostages.

Cesar is now the unwilling guest of the US justice system, the BBC’s Jeremy McDermott reports from Colombia.

He has lost everything and is likely to spend the next 20 years in an American cell.

Farc’s greatest humiliation

Handcuffed and wearing a military-style combat helmet and bullet-proof vest, Cesar boarded a US government plane late on Thursday morning, leaving Bogota for Washington.

Ingrid Betancourt (centre) with daughter Melanie and son Lorenzo after her rescue - 3/7/2008

About 50 police officers escorted him to the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) plane, Colombian radio station RCN reports.

The former Farc jailer faces charges of drugs-trafficking as his guerrilla unit, the 1st Front, is a major drugs-trafficking organisation in its own right.

But Colombia’s supreme court denied a US request to charge him with kidnapping because his alleged crimes did not take place on US soil.

Cesar has been forsaken by his former Farc comrades who condemned him as a traitor after he was hoodwinked by an army intelligence operation masquerading as a humanitarian mission.

Undercover soldiers persuaded him to hand over 15 hostages in his care, among them Ingrid Betancourt and three US defence contractors.

Not only did he surrender his hostages but he was persuaded to accompany the mission, climbing aboard a helicopter where he was quickly overpowered and placed under arrest.

Without the support of his fellow rebels he will be utterly alone in the US, where he does not speak the language.

Alone to reflect on how he was part of the greatest humiliation ever inflicted on the Farc in 45 years of fighting, our correspondent says. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Call to help Colombia displaced

Displaced children in LA Reliquia, Villavicencio, Meta Department

Amnesty International has denounced what it says is a dramatic rise in the number of people being displaced by Colombia’s armed conflict.

The human rights group notes that 380,000 people were forced to flee in 2008, a rise of nearly 25% on 2007.

Communities in areas of economic, military or strategic importance are being targeted in particular, it says.

Amnesty says Colombia has one of the world’s biggest displaced populations, put at between three and four million.

The latest report by Amnesty says that as many as 380,000 people were forced to leave their homes last year to escape violence arising from the long-running conflict between guerrillas, paramilitary groups and the armed forces.

Their figures are based on information from a local human rights group, the Centre for Human Rights and the Displaced (Codhes), which reported in April that there had been a 25% rise in the number of internally displaced.

"The dire humanitarian situation in Colombia is one of today’s most hidden tragedies"

Marcelo Pollack
Amnesty International

At the time, the government department dedicated to helping the displaced, Accion Social, said there had been an increase but also that some people were falsely claiming to have been forced from their homes in order to qualify from compensation.

According to government figures, 2.9 million people were displaced between 1997 and 2008.

Amnesty says many people have been deliberately targeted by guerrilla groups, paramilitaries, and the security forces as part of strategies designed to remove whole communities from areas of military, strategic or economic importance.

Shelter for internally displaced people, Colombia

The great majority of those affected are from one of three groups – indigenous people, Afro-descendents and campesinos – or farmworkers.

Many of them live in areas which are potentially economically profitable, such as land that could be used for mineral and oil exploration or agro-industrial developments.

Amnesty International’s Americas Deputy Director Marcelo Pollack said: "The dire humanitarian situation in Colombia is one of today’s most hidden tragedies, and belies claims by the Colombian government that the country has overcome its troubled past.

"Until the authorities in Colombia acknowledge the very real effects of the conflict, the human rights of millions of people have little chance of being protected."

Amnesty said much of the wealth accumulated by the paramilitaries and their political and business supporters was based on the misappropriation of land through violence or the threat of violence.

Some estimate that between four and six million hectares (10-15 million acres) of land have been stolen.

The human rights group is urging the Colombian authorities to take action stop forced displacement, improve the protection of civilians and to identify and return all stolen land and other assets to their rightful owners or their families.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Swine flu pandemic is ‘unstoppable’, says WHO official

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