Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Colombia's Uribe: Free Market not the Answer



During his innaugurtion for a 2nd term (after a successful Constitutional 'reform' to allow it), Colombian President Alvaro Uribe closed his remarks with a suprising nod to his leftist collegues in the region - and a stick in the eye of Washingon's conservatives.

Bits compiled from the LA Times, Washington Post and IHT coverage:


"We don't share the idea of promoting growth and abandoning the war on poverty to the fate of the free market. We reject the notion of the equitable distribution of poverty. We believe in the growth of social justice," Uribe said.

"We are against a fiscally tight macro-economic policy that leaves economic growth to the luck of supply and demand. The state must be devoted in equal parts to growth and equality," he said.

Uribe made no bold proposals for improving the lot of the 50 percent of Colombians who live below the poverty line -- on less than three U.S. dollars a day -- even as the rich benefit from the increased foreign investment that improved security has brought.

He also promised to pursue peace with armed rebels despite the failure of such gestures in the past.

"We are not afraid to negotiate peace. I confess that I worry about something different, the risk of not achieving peace and reverting to insecurity," Uribe said.

But senators from the opposition Democratic Pole party, in silent protest over Uribe's preference for guns over peace-building, held up pictures several people being held captive by rebels, including some - such as former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt - who have been held longer than Uribe has been president.

Tanks and 30,000 troops formed a two-block perimeter around the Congress accessible only to journalists and dignitaries

5 Comments:

Blogger jsb said...

"But senators from the opposition Democratic Pole party, in silent protest over Uribe's preference for guns over peace-building, held up pictures several people being held captive by rebels, including some - such as former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt - who have been held longer than Uribe has been president."

That's FARC they're talking about, no? The group that shares your world view? The group Castro and Chavez support? Why do they need to kidnap people? ...blow up churches full of women and children? What was that for again? Social justice?

6:08 AM  
Blogger leftside said...

No, I support the Democratic Pole party in Colombia. Castro and Chavez have never once said they support the guerillas, nor lifted one finger to help them. They have proved invaluable in negotiating between them and the government though... ask the Colombians.

Again, you ignore the content of the post.

9:28 AM  
Blogger jsb said...

"Castro and Chavez have never once said they support the guerillas, nor lifted one finger to help them."

That's bullshit. Castro has helped the FARC for years and Chavez gave their minister of information shelter in Venezuela, along with other FARC members.

9:28 AM  
Blogger leftside said...

How has Castro helped the FARC, besides hi work as a Uribe-bakced negotiator?

I don't know what information minister you're talking about, but if he's not violent, then what crime has he committed?

But don't take my word, read the praise Uribe himself has bestowed upon Chavez's Government in their war against FARC:

On May 15, 2006, 2006 President Uribe praised Chavez for his help in facilitating the peace process in Colombia:

Uribe also replied today to the praises that Chavez gave him from London and assured that the government of Caracas has greatly facilitated the peace explorations with the ELN guerrilla, DPA emphasized.

The Colombian president recognized that Venezuela has played a very important role in the peace exploration dialogues with the ELN and the transfer of the rebel chief Erlinton Chamorro, alias “Antonio Garcia”, to Cuba.

I called President Chavez and asked him to transport “Antonio Garcia” to Cuba, I then asked him for the favor of housing him in Venezuela. He is in Venezuela today, protected by the Venezuelangovernment not clandestinely, but as a petition of the government of Colombia”, he added.

As well, Venezuela was instrumental in the capture and return of FARC rebel leader Gentil Alvis Patino to Colombia. The following was also reported in El Universal, a Venezuelan news daily:“Uribe revealed that this past Thursday he communicated with Chavez and asked him to facilitate the transportation of [a] rebel leader. `He [Chavez] accepted and Venezuela did facilitate this, and I wish to give President Chavez my thanks publicly as a champion in this effort so that afterward no one starts to offer conjecture or distortions of this reality [that this happened as a result of my request to President Chavez].

12:06 PM  
Blogger jsb said...

"I don't know what information minister you're talking about"

Of course you don't. Makes me wonder what else you don't know.

http://www.marxist.com/Latinam/venezuela_colombia_conflict.htm

7:59 AM  

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