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March 13, 2006
U.S. Silent on Colombia’s Election Irregularities
by Garry Leech
How would Washington have reacted if left-wing paramilitary death
squads in Venezuela supportive of President Hugo Chávez had
claimed to control 35 percent of that country’s National Assembly
following elections four years ago? What would President George
W. Bush have said about the man in the red beret if that political
control had been achieved through massacres of the political opposition?
What would Condoleezza Rice be saying today if those same left-wing
militias had used violence and coercion during recent election campaigns
to gain a majority in the National Assembly? Do we believe for a
minute that the Bush administration would respond with silence?
If
we were to transplant the aforementioned hypothetical scenario to
Colombia it would constitute a clear representation of that country’s
electoral process. The principal difference in the Colombian version
is that President Alvaro Uribe and the paramilitary death squads
are firmly entrenched on the right side of the political spectrum
rather than the left.
Pro-Uribe parties proved victorious in the March 12 congressional
elections, gaining a majority in Colombia’s Congress. Many
of the pro-Uribe candidates had violence and intimidation perpetrated
by right-wing paramilitaries to thank for their victory. As German
Espejo, an analyst with the Bogotá-based Security and Democracy
Foundation, noted, “The paramilitaries played a decisive role
in this election, particularly in the northern part of the country.”
The Bush administration, however, has decided to ignore the massive
electoral irregularities in Colombia.
In the March 12 congressional elections, as has been the case in
most of Colombia’s recent elections, the technical act of
voting and vote counting were generally considered to be free and
fair. It is in the process of campaigning, however, that irregularities
are most evident in Colombia. While the country’s leftist
guerrilla groups often attempt to disrupt elections, they have mostly
remained outside the electoral process. The role of the paramilitaries,
on the other hand, has proven particularly troubling in recent years
as they have sought to actively participate in elections in order
to directly increase their influence over the country’s governing
institutions.
Colombia’s electoral process is undermined by paramilitiaries
who use violence and intimidation to determine which candidates
can and cannot run in regions under their control and to ensure
that their chosen candidates are elected. As the Associated
Press noted only two days before the March 12 congressional
elections, paramilitary leader Rodrigo Tovar, “who’s
accused of several massacres against civilians as well as being
a major drug-trafficker, reigned over much of Colombia’s Caribbean
coast, deciding who could and could not run for public office.”
An additional factor that aided the paramilitary cause in the congressional
elections was the low voter turnout. Preliminary reports show that
only 34 percent of eligible voters went to the polls, low even by
Colombian standards—42 percent of voters participated four
years ago. In one Bogotá precinct, only 80 of the 1,200 registered
voters showed up to cast a ballot. The combination of the paramilitarization
of the electoral process and the voter apathy evident in many areas
not under paramilitary control ensured a victory for pro-Uribe parties.
The paramilitarization of Colombian politics intensified four years
ago when it became evident that right-wing paramilitaries were determining
which candidates would prove victorious in congressional districts
situated in regions under their control. Through a campaign of intimidation
and assassination, candidates not supportive of the paramilitaries
were eliminated, leaving pro-paramilitary candidates to run unopposed
in many districts, often garnering more than 90 percent of the vote.
In the paramilitary-dominated department of Magdalena, for example,
mayoral candidates ran unopposed in 14 of the 30 municipalities.
Following the 2002 congressional elections, paramilitary leader
Salvatore Mancuso claimed that his organization controlled 35 percent
of the Colombian Congress. The paramilitary demobilization process
that ensued did not diminish the group’s political influence.
Having consolidated control in many electoral districts four years
ago, paramilitaries were able to utilize their newly gained regional
political power to influence the March 12 elections.
The supposed demilitarization of the paramilitaries has done little
to alleviate the threats faced by candidates critical of the paramilitary
agenda. Juan David Diaz was a candidate running in the town of Magangue
in northern Colombia, where he had exposed paramilitary ties to
powerful local business people. According to Diaz, paramilitaries
threatened to kill him if he attempted to campaign in the town of
160,000. In another prominent case, independent Colombian Congressman
Pedro Arenas from the eastern department of Guaviare was warned
by paramilitaries that they would kill him if he ran for re-election.
Arenas chose not to run and moved his family out of the region.
According to Espejo, paramilitaries not only use threats and violence
against opposing candidates, they also fund congressional campaigns
in the northern departments of César, Guajira, Atlantico,
Magdalena, Bolívar and Córdoba, where their political
influence is most prominent. It was recently revealed that President
Alvaro Uribe’s 2002 election campaign received a $43,000 contribution
from a company owned by a jailed business leader linked to paramilitaries
in Bolívar.
Three pro-Uribe parties—Partido de la U, Cambio Radical and
the Democratic Colombia Party—recently expelled seven candidates
for plotting election strategies with the paramilitaries. The candidates
were only expelled, however, after their links to militias were
revealed in the nation’s largest daily El Tiempo.
Ultimately, the expulsion meant little as all seven candidates immediately
joined smaller pro-Uribe parties in order to continue their congressional
campaigns. Meanwhile, the two reporters that broke the story received
death threats shortly after the article was published.
Other than one comment by U.S. Ambassador William Woods in December,
the Bush administration has kept silent with regard to the paramilitarization
of Colombian politics. It is difficult to imagine the Bush administration
exhibiting an equivalent restraint if similar electoral irregularities
were to benefit Hugo Chávez in Venezuela. In fact, there
would likely be immediate condemnations and calls for intervention
to “protect” Venezuelan democracy.
Given the electoral shift to the left that is occurring throughout
much of Latin America, the Bush administration is not about to undermine
Colombia’s President Uribe, Washington’s most reliable
ally in the region. The Bush White House has decided to turn a blind
eye to the gross irregularities that occurred in Colombia’s
congressional elections; irregularities that it would never tolerate
in a nation whose policies contravened U.S. political and economic
interests. Consequently, the Bush administration has endorsed the
paramilitarization of Colombian politics, a process that is not
only further undermining democracy in Colombia, but also laying
the foundations for a “Para-state” in which the principal
power brokers will be the country’s major drug traffickers.
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