|
New president faces challenges
COLOMBIA’S President-elect Alvaro Uribe was sworn in
Wednesday before the congress as the country’s new president
for the 2002-2006 period, during which he has to face some
hard tasks including fighting against armed groups and the
cocaine industry, revitalizing the economy and carrying out
political reform.During his election campaign, Uribe’s tough
stance against the rebels, right-wing militias and drug
traffickers won him a high supporting rate, sweeping him to
presidency in the country’s May 26 general elections.Although
hopes were high that Uribe could end the civil war in which
some 3,500 people are killed every year, there is still no
glimmering of a peace process.It is difficult for Uribe to end
the civil war by restarting peace talks with the country’s two
largest rebel groups, the 17,000-strong Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the 4,500-strong National
Liberation Army (ELN).Uribe’s predecessor, Andres Pastrana,
who tried for three years to negotiate a peace with the FARC,
was forced to suspend the peace talks with the group on Feb.
20 at the height of a series of attacks blamed on the
guerrilla group. And on May 31, Pastrana announced the
suspension of peace negotiations with the ELN after no
substantial results were achieved, completely smashing his
dream of negotiating an end to the war.The FARC and the ELN
expressed their readiness to begin peace talks with the Uribe
government, but they continued to launch attacks aimed at
gaining control of the country. Since early June, the FARC has
conducted a campaign of death and kidnapping threats against
town mayors and state officials, with the aim of forcing them
out of their posts.On Monday, just two days ahead of Uribe’s
inauguration, the FARC, which has bombed civilian facilities
such as oil pipelines and electricity towers for years to
further undermine the country’s already fragile economy, waged
a series of bombing attacks, injuring five civilians and at
least seven soldiers.In face of a surge in rebel attacks,
Uribe attempts to use military advances against the guerrillas
to dry up their financing from drug trafficking and force the
rebels to negotiate a peace settlement with the
government.Nevertheless, some analysts noted that this was not
likely to happen. “What really is happening is an
intensification of the conflict, with a more open
confrontation,” a UN specialist said.With strong support from
the United States, which recently gave the Colombian armed
forces the right to use U.S.-supplied military equipment
against the rebels, Uribe was pinning his hope on an escalated
war for solving Colombia’s armed conflict. However some
analysts noted that Uribe’s embrace of military solutions to
social problems could plunge Colombia into further
violence.Besides the armed groups, Uribe also faces a country
in economic turmoil, with some 64 percent of his people living
below the poverty line and more than 17 percent of the urban
people without jobs. Many people see the social crisis as a
time bomb.The Economic Commission for Latin America and the
Caribbean (CEPAL) said in a recent report that Colombia’s
economy could worsen in 2002, affected by the breakdown in the
peace process, the change of government and the situation
prevailing in the international arena.Other difficulties that
lay ahead include a political reform and a campaign against
corruption, which he promised in his electoral campaign.Right
after being sworn in, Uribe planned to propose a referendum to
cut by half the number of lawmakers and merge the two houses
of parliament, with the aim of reducing government waste and
boosting defense spending.However, the proposed parliamentary
reform could provoke a battle between the new president and
the congress, lessening support for Uribe’s other reforms.On
Aug. 2, the majority Liberal Party rejected Uribe’s proposal
to reduce and turn the bicameral congress into a unicameral
one. Legislators even warned that if Uribe insists on the
proposal, they would propose a referendum on early general
elections.As the first independent politician to be elected
president over the past century, Uribe really needs backing
from the two principal political forces, the Liberal and
Conservative parties.After being elected as president, Uribe
has laid out ambitious plans to increase the size of the
US-backed military, reform the congress and clean up official
corruption. With so many tasks ahead of him, peace in the
country is the most important issue that Uribe must deal with
first. After so many years of armed conflict and thousands of
civilian deaths, a negotiated peace seems the only solution.
(Xinhua)
|