Justin Podur: The people of Colombia are cracking up the walls of war and authoritarianism
The protests that
started with the national strike called by Colombia’s central union on November
21 to protest pension reforms and the broken promises of the
peace accords have persisted for two months and grown into a protest against
the whole establishment. And the protests have continued into the new year and
show no signs of stopping.
The end of the decade
has seemed to bring an unstoppable march of the right wing in Latin America as
elsewhere. The 2016 coup in Brazil that ended with fascist Jair
Bolsonaro in power, the 2019 coup in Bolivia, the continuously rolling coup in
Venezuela, all showcased the ruthlessness of the U.S. in disposing of left-wing
governments in the region. Right-wing victories at the ballot box occurred in
Chile in 2017 and in Colombia in 2018, where the electorate rejected the
left-wing Gustavo Petro and embraced Iván Duque, a protege of the infamous
former president Álvaro Uribe Vélez. But with the new wave of protests, the
unstoppable right-wing juggernaut is facing many challenges.
In Chile, three months
of protests, still going, are demanding the resignation of President
Sebastián Piñera and the reversal of a range of neoliberal policies. Even in
the face of the police and army using live fire against protesters, they have
not let up. Ecuador is another
peculiar case, in which Lenín Moreno ran as a candidate who would continue
left-wing policies, but who promptly reversed course upon reaching power in
2017, including revoking the asylum of Julian Assange, who is now in a UK
prison. Reopening drilling in the Amazon, opening a new U.S. airbase in the
Galapagos, getting rid of taxes on the wealthy, and doing a new package of
International Monetary Fund austerity measures was enough to spark a sustained
protest. Moreno’s government was forced to negotiate with the protesters and
has withdrawn some of the austerity measures....
https://www.alternet.org/2020/01/the-people-of-colombia-are-cracking-up-the-walls-of-war-and-authoritarianism/