Berliner Boersenzeitung - Colombia elections: the spectre of political assassination

EUR -
AED 4.090634
AFN 75.73214
ALL 98.952997
AMD 431.556558
ANG 2.007321
AOA 1042.98536
ARS 1078.636775
AUD 1.630475
AWG 2.00746
AZN 1.896131
BAM 1.947187
BBD 2.248853
BDT 133.101277
BGN 1.951999
BHD 0.419779
BIF 3225.301057
BMD 1.113709
BND 1.431468
BOB 7.695994
BRL 6.095437
BSD 1.113774
BTN 93.1552
BWP 14.578843
BYN 3.644978
BYR 21828.694998
BZD 2.24509
CAD 1.500645
CDF 3190.775801
CHF 0.946112
CLF 0.036789
CLP 1015.135062
CNY 7.831379
CNH 7.831423
COP 4675.350082
CRC 576.853685
CUC 1.113709
CUP 29.513287
CVE 110.635599
CZK 25.156428
DJF 197.928369
DKK 7.457507
DOP 67.268713
DZD 147.485423
EGP 54.068334
ERN 16.705634
ETB 133.728637
FJD 2.447765
FKP 0.848155
GBP 0.835633
GEL 3.034845
GGP 0.848155
GHS 17.652709
GIP 0.848155
GMD 76.292597
GNF 9603.512382
GTQ 8.609917
GYD 232.981586
HKD 8.669372
HNL 27.697739
HRK 7.572119
HTG 147.019714
HUF 395.433176
IDR 16904.096858
ILS 4.168473
IMP 0.848155
INR 93.122716
IQD 1458.958696
IRR 46878.789002
ISK 150.495371
JEP 0.848155
JMD 174.428481
JOD 0.789285
JPY 160.98555
KES 143.668504
KGS 93.767259
KHR 4538.363772
KMF 492.204
KPW 1002.337404
KRW 1487.141125
KWD 0.340105
KYD 0.928215
KZT 532.768284
LAK 24593.476168
LBP 99788.320119
LKR 335.087865
LRD 215.920326
LSL 19.311307
LTL 3.288493
LVL 0.673672
LYD 5.290147
MAD 10.772892
MDL 19.38569
MGA 5061.806935
MKD 61.319002
MMK 3617.283156
MNT 3784.382889
MOP 8.933267
MRU 44.23642
MUR 50.829976
MVR 17.10677
MWK 1933.398669
MXN 21.826689
MYR 4.600775
MZN 71.11018
NAD 19.311818
NGN 1843.901072
NIO 40.956685
NOK 11.772477
NPR 149.046748
NZD 1.775811
OMR 0.428734
PAB 1.113784
PEN 4.199775
PGK 4.362676
PHP 62.475747
PKR 309.444247
PLN 4.269072
PYG 8680.604618
QAR 4.054735
RON 4.97516
RSD 117.082021
RUB 103.016701
RWF 1484.574002
SAR 4.178678
SBD 9.254622
SCR 16.237574
SDG 669.893037
SEK 11.342786
SGD 1.435537
SHP 0.848155
SLE 25.445245
SLL 23353.913649
SOS 635.927757
SRD 33.917448
STD 23051.52625
SVC 9.74598
SYP 2798.227023
SZL 19.311682
THB 36.428861
TJS 11.856411
TMT 3.897981
TND 3.405168
TOP 2.608419
TRY 38.050422
TTD 7.578547
TWD 35.598037
TZS 3029.288195
UAH 45.928166
UGX 4112.808542
USD 1.113709
UYU 46.91292
UZS 14216.494154
VEF 4034469.101433
VES 40.944898
VND 27391.671096
VUV 132.221761
WST 3.115559
XAF 653.074236
XAG 0.035
XAU 0.000419
XCD 3.009854
XDR 0.823956
XOF 656.524309
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.770236
ZAR 19.227079
ZMK 10024.720301
ZMW 29.543458
ZWL 358.613821
  • RBGPF

    -0.6200

    59.48

    -1.04%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    25.09

    -0.04%

  • CMSD

    -0.0550

    25.065

    -0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    7.07

    0%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    10.06

    -0.3%

  • BCC

    -3.7100

    138.07

    -2.69%

  • SCS

    -0.2400

    12.88

    -1.86%

  • RIO

    0.2500

    67.67

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    -0.1550

    48.375

    -0.32%

  • JRI

    -0.0350

    13.385

    -0.26%

  • AZN

    0.6700

    77.54

    +0.86%

  • BTI

    -0.1350

    37.965

    -0.36%

  • BCE

    -0.2500

    34.88

    -0.72%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    40.56

    -1.04%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    70.1

    -0.01%

  • BP

    -1.1420

    31.688

    -3.6%

Colombia elections: the spectre of political assassination
Colombia elections: the spectre of political assassination / Photo: SCHNEYDER MENDOZA - AFP/File

Colombia elections: the spectre of political assassination

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 nervous-looking bodyguards brandishing bullet-proof shields.

Text size:

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.

- 'Very high' risk -

"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 "first-hand 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.

- Fear of the left -

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.

Alexander Gamba, a professor at the Saint Thomas University, says there are three reasons for a "possible" attack on Petro.

Firstly, Colombia has "violence professionals" like the almost two dozen mercenaries who took part in the assassination of Haiti's president last year.

Secondly, Petro's opponents have claimed his victory would be "a huge national catastrophe", which has contributed to an atmosphere in which his assassination would almost be presented as a "patriotic act."

Lastly, the country has "never had political change" involving the left wing, which conservatives continue to link to the armed rebellion.

"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.

For its part, the outgoing government of President Ivan Duque, has said Petro "is one of the best protected people" in the country.

(K.Müller--BBZ)