Latest News

Colombian presidential candidate Valencia promises to end the 'total-peace' policy and will be stricter on security

Paloma valencia, the Colombian presidential candidate, said that if she were elected as president of Colombia, she would abandon the "total-peace" policy of her government and adopt a more aggressive security strategy against armed groups. This is a radical departure from President?Gustavo Petro’s leftist approach.

"The policy of total peace ends with me." "Total security will start," Valencia, 48 said in an interview Tuesday. She added that she would reactivate the arrest warrants and increase security forces with United States' cooperation.

Valencia, the candidate of the Democratic Center Party, a right-wing party backed by Alvaro Uribe as former president, opposes the continuation of peace talks with dissident groups such as former?FARC rebels and the National Liberation Army, or ELN, along with criminal gangs like the Gulf Clan. Petro's government tried to?negotiate with armed groups in order to end the six-decade war that has claimed more than 450,000 lives. However, talks have failed with less than 3 months remaining of his term.

Valencia's platform places a high priority on security. This includes expanding the police force and military by 60,000 people and resuming aerial herbicide spraying for coca plants using non-glyphosate herbicides, which was banned in 2015 due to?health concerns.

Valencia, a three-term senator from Valencia, faces a crowded race that includes leftist Ivan Cepeda as well as independent right-wing businessman Abelardo De La Espriella.

"We will elect a woman president for the very first time." "We must make history," Valencia said, who has focused her campaign on women voters.

The polls indicate a close race for second place. This would determine whether Cepeda of the Historic Pact Coalition is the opponent in a possible run-off.

ECONOMIC STANCE

Valencia's economic policy favors the?boost of oil, gas, and mining production, including fracking, with environmental safeguards. This is in contrast to Petro's efforts to halt new fossil fuel developments.

She said that fracking will be banned in the Amazon and high-altitude paramo ecosystems. She said that a 5% growth in the mining, construction and energy sectors could generate 30 trillion pesos (about $7.9 billion), which would be used to fund social expenditure. Valencia also proposed reducing income taxes, eliminating wealth and financial transaction tax, and supporting the U.S. led "Americas Shield", regional security initiative.

The presidential election is on May 31, and more than 41 million Colombians can vote. Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta, Editing by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez & Chizu Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)