News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: Nationwide Local Elections Peaceful In Colombia |
Title: | Colombia: Nationwide Local Elections Peaceful In Colombia |
Published On: | 2000-10-30 |
Source: | Miami Herald (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 03:56:04 |
NATIONWIDE LOCAL ELECTIONS PEACEFUL IN COLOMBIA
BOGOTA, Colombia -- (AP) -- After months of violence-marred
campaigning, voting went peacefully in elections seen as a vote
against the guerrilla and paramilitary warfare that has wracked
Colombia for decades.
Independents claimed mayoral races in four of Colombia's five largest
cities Sunday, posing a challenge to the two traditional political
parties, the Conservatives and the Liberals. Their victories included
Bogota, where Antanas Mockus, an eccentric former university professor
who held the post from 1995-97, was named mayor.
Turnout appeared strong, despite months of violence, and there were no
reports of major clashes Sunday. Voting was disrupted in only two of
Colombia's nearly 1,100 municipalities. Isolated fighting left two
soldiers and one guerrilla dead -- fewer casualties than on a typical
day.
In a guerrilla-held area in the south, leftist rebels were charged
with stealing ballots, invalidating that region's vote. It was the
first time in 36 years of fighting that Colombians had voted under
formal rebel rule.
Sunday's elections came amid mounting tensions here: The country is
bracing for increased fighting as a U.S. backed anti-drug offensive
gets under way in cocaine-producing regions controlled by the
guerrillas and paramilitary groups.
Washington is providing Colombia with $1.3 billion in mostly military
aid and training to fight the drug trade and strengthen democratic
institutions.
``Voting sends a very important message to the peace process,''
President Andres Pastrana said after casting his ballot in Bogota's
colonial Bolivar Plaza. ``It says to the insurgents that Colombians
want to strengthen our democratic process, to strengthen our
democracy.''
Violence among rebels, rival paramilitary militias and government
troops has left tens of thousands dead, forced millions to flee their
homes and crippled a once-vibrant economy.
Twenty-one candidates for mayor or city council were killed by
paramilitary groups or leftist rebels in the run-up to the elections,
according to Colombia's mayors' association. About 100 candidates
withdrew, citing intimidation and threats by the armed factions.
In the past week alone, eight lawmakers and local political candidates
were kidnapped by suspected militias or guerrillas.
``This country is a disaster,'' said Lucy Restrepo said as she left a
polling station in a wealthy Bogota neighborhood guarded by soldiers
with machine guns.
``There is robbery, corruption, war. It's horrible,'' she said. ``Who
knows if my vote will help?''
Guerrillas do not consider the political system legitimate and were
not formally participating in the elections. However, the country's
largest rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or
FARC, largely honored its pledge not to disrupt the process.
In San Vicente del Caguan, the largest of five southern municipalities
the FARC controls openly under a peace concession from Pastrana, an
independent was elected mayor even though the rebels informally backed
his opponent.
However, charges that rebels stole ballots forced officials to void
elections in Vista Hermosa, another of the five FARC-held towns.
In Putumayo, a southern state paralyzed by a month-old FARC road
blockade and clashes with paramilitaries, voting held only in large
towns went smoothly, officials said.
In separate news Sunday, Colombia's second-largest guerrilla group,
the National Liberation Army, announced that about two dozen hostages
kidnapped last month near the western city of Cali would be freed
starting Monday.
BOGOTA, Colombia -- (AP) -- After months of violence-marred
campaigning, voting went peacefully in elections seen as a vote
against the guerrilla and paramilitary warfare that has wracked
Colombia for decades.
Independents claimed mayoral races in four of Colombia's five largest
cities Sunday, posing a challenge to the two traditional political
parties, the Conservatives and the Liberals. Their victories included
Bogota, where Antanas Mockus, an eccentric former university professor
who held the post from 1995-97, was named mayor.
Turnout appeared strong, despite months of violence, and there were no
reports of major clashes Sunday. Voting was disrupted in only two of
Colombia's nearly 1,100 municipalities. Isolated fighting left two
soldiers and one guerrilla dead -- fewer casualties than on a typical
day.
In a guerrilla-held area in the south, leftist rebels were charged
with stealing ballots, invalidating that region's vote. It was the
first time in 36 years of fighting that Colombians had voted under
formal rebel rule.
Sunday's elections came amid mounting tensions here: The country is
bracing for increased fighting as a U.S. backed anti-drug offensive
gets under way in cocaine-producing regions controlled by the
guerrillas and paramilitary groups.
Washington is providing Colombia with $1.3 billion in mostly military
aid and training to fight the drug trade and strengthen democratic
institutions.
``Voting sends a very important message to the peace process,''
President Andres Pastrana said after casting his ballot in Bogota's
colonial Bolivar Plaza. ``It says to the insurgents that Colombians
want to strengthen our democratic process, to strengthen our
democracy.''
Violence among rebels, rival paramilitary militias and government
troops has left tens of thousands dead, forced millions to flee their
homes and crippled a once-vibrant economy.
Twenty-one candidates for mayor or city council were killed by
paramilitary groups or leftist rebels in the run-up to the elections,
according to Colombia's mayors' association. About 100 candidates
withdrew, citing intimidation and threats by the armed factions.
In the past week alone, eight lawmakers and local political candidates
were kidnapped by suspected militias or guerrillas.
``This country is a disaster,'' said Lucy Restrepo said as she left a
polling station in a wealthy Bogota neighborhood guarded by soldiers
with machine guns.
``There is robbery, corruption, war. It's horrible,'' she said. ``Who
knows if my vote will help?''
Guerrillas do not consider the political system legitimate and were
not formally participating in the elections. However, the country's
largest rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or
FARC, largely honored its pledge not to disrupt the process.
In San Vicente del Caguan, the largest of five southern municipalities
the FARC controls openly under a peace concession from Pastrana, an
independent was elected mayor even though the rebels informally backed
his opponent.
However, charges that rebels stole ballots forced officials to void
elections in Vista Hermosa, another of the five FARC-held towns.
In Putumayo, a southern state paralyzed by a month-old FARC road
blockade and clashes with paramilitaries, voting held only in large
towns went smoothly, officials said.
In separate news Sunday, Colombia's second-largest guerrilla group,
the National Liberation Army, announced that about two dozen hostages
kidnapped last month near the western city of Cali would be freed
starting Monday.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...