Zürcher Nachrichten - 'No going back' for Colombia's workers as the right eyes return

EUR -
AED 4.183708
AFN 74.047812
ALL 93.779346
AMD 418.593113
ANG 2.038814
AOA 1044.645922
ARS 1699.504962
AUD 1.644485
AWG 2.050558
AZN 1.945337
BAM 1.955361
BBD 2.302192
BDT 140.888353
BGN 1.955176
BHD 0.431005
BIF 3400.651051
BMD 1.139199
BND 1.475575
BOB 7.887625
BRL 5.819829
BSD 1.143048
BTN 108.887196
BWP 15.459527
BYN 3.267279
BYR 22328.302484
BZD 2.298893
CAD 1.614176
CDF 2572.311729
CHF 0.923287
CLF 0.026838
CLP 1056.277139
CNY 7.720296
CNH 7.73294
COP 3696.541612
CRC 519.98548
CUC 1.139199
CUP 30.188776
CVE 110.23008
CZK 24.264826
DJF 203.546238
DKK 7.474861
DOP 67.125217
DZD 152.166155
EGP 56.80719
ERN 17.087987
ETB 183.362003
FJD 2.544057
FKP 0.850008
GBP 0.851876
GEL 3.013158
GGP 0.850008
GHS 13.104769
GIP 0.850008
GMD 83.701845
GNF 10025.747957
GTQ 8.721773
GYD 239.111042
HKD 8.929731
HNL 30.601857
HRK 7.531934
HTG 149.59771
HUF 357.172529
IDR 20639.952448
ILS 3.430013
IMP 0.850008
INR 109.022716
IQD 1497.463631
IRR 1566113.971631
ISK 143.402798
JEP 0.850008
JMD 180.607845
JOD 0.807658
JPY 184.672173
KES 147.389981
KGS 99.621595
KHR 4608.005372
KMF 492.134327
KPW 1025.279176
KRW 1718.071687
KWD 0.35265
KYD 0.952586
KZT 538.878954
LAK 25776.209994
LBP 102353.923925
LKR 383.507221
LRD 207.576995
LSL 18.618436
LTL 3.363759
LVL 0.68909
LYD 7.321388
MAD 10.678014
MDL 20.087724
MGA 4900.942142
MKD 61.631156
MMK 2391.710245
MNT 4084.326917
MOP 9.229827
MRU 45.54097
MUR 53.712879
MVR 17.600635
MWK 1982.172152
MXN 19.967423
MYR 4.648727
MZN 72.796999
NAD 18.618518
NGN 1571.844281
NIO 42.060552
NOK 11.158398
NPR 174.225629
NZD 1.977982
OMR 0.439174
PAB 1.142948
PEN 3.883128
PGK 5.102831
PHP 70.195742
PKR 317.74922
PLN 4.334254
PYG 6949.164535
QAR 4.167136
RON 5.236325
RSD 117.354669
RUB 87.535694
RWF 1679.23754
SAR 4.283006
SBD 9.168939
SCR 16.631964
SDG 684.095486
SEK 11.05255
SGD 1.474716
SHP 0.850527
SLE 27.739324
SLL 23888.434349
SOS 653.253262
SRD 42.845849
STD 23579.121467
STN 24.49439
SVC 10.001753
SYP 125.918067
SZL 18.615818
THB 38.052098
TJS 10.578945
TMT 3.987197
TND 3.378737
TOP 2.742918
TRY 53.543444
TTD 7.766324
TWD 36.544343
TZS 2996.312338
UAH 50.853323
UGX 4205.962931
USD 1.139199
UYU 46.089647
UZS 13805.898837
VES 807.471613
VND 29922.773326
VUV 135.571106
WST 3.145217
XAF 655.815444
XAG 0.01957
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.078742
XCG 2.060137
XDR 0.815624
XOF 655.812566
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.075597
ZAR 18.679106
ZMK 10254.163081
ZMW 20.603558
ZWL 366.821647
  • CMSC

    0.0650

    22.085

    +0.29%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.59

    +0.33%

  • AZN

    -6.8800

    171.61

    -4.01%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.78

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    21.38

    +0.28%

  • BTI

    -0.0151

    60.02

    -0.03%

  • BCC

    3.8200

    76.06

    +5.02%

  • BP

    0.6500

    39.2

    +1.66%

  • RBGPF

    0.3500

    67.35

    +0.52%

  • RIO

    1.0500

    90.54

    +1.16%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.01

    -0.15%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.38

    +0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    19.46

    +1.95%

  • VOD

    1.6400

    14.72

    +11.14%

  • RELX

    0.3700

    32.44

    +1.14%

'No going back' for Colombia's workers as the right eyes return
'No going back' for Colombia's workers as the right eyes return / Photo: Raul ARBOLEDA - AFP

'No going back' for Colombia's workers as the right eyes return

Colombian workers on Friday had a message for the two right-wing candidates trying to flip the presidency four years after the country elected its first leftist leader: "We're not going back."

Text size:

The South American country goes to the polls on May 31 to choose a successor to firebrand President Gustavo Petro, famous for his skirmishes on X with President Donald Trump.

Polls show Petro's political heir, Senator Ivan Cepeda, winning the first round of voting with a program of continued social support for the poor in one of the world's most unequal countries.

But it is unclear whether he can triumph in a run-off against ultra-right lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella or conservative senator Paloma Valencia in an election shadowed by a surge in guerrilla violence, which the right has laid at Petro's feet.

Addressing a May Day rally in Bogota on Friday, Cepeda warned that workers' rights, including an unprecedented increase in the minimum wage, would be rolled back if the right came to power.

His rivals, he declared, represented the "neoliberal model of opulence for a narrow, unscrupulous and unproductive elite" that dominated Colombia's history until Petro, a former leftist guerrilla, came to power in 2022.

"Comrades, don't allow them to take away what we have achieved!" Cepeda, a professorial figure in a collarless white shirt and rimless glasses, told thousands of supporters gathered outside Congress under a hot Andean sun.

"The people have awoken. There's no going back," former health minister Carolina Corcho roared from the stage.

- 'Peace of mind' -

A few months ago, the odds appeared to be stacked against the left.

From Argentina to Bolivia to Chile, Latin American voters were tossing out left-wing governments, accusing them of corruption, shambolic economic management and/or failing to halt crime and illegal migration.

Petro was in the crosshairs of US President Donald Trump, who in January told him to "watch his ass" after overthrowing fellow left-winger Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela.

But after patching up relations with Trump during a White House visit, and implementing a 23-percent minimum wage hike, Petro's popularity soared, and with it that of Cepeda.

For Alejandro Guayara, a 38-year-old father of two struggling to make ends meet as a doorman in a Bogota apartment building, the wage hike represented "peace of mind."

While only 2.4 million Colombians are paid the minimum wage, many others have benefitted from increases to night-time and weekend pay pushed through by Petro last year as part of a major labor reform.

"People have experienced new-found hope with this president because ordinary people are being taken into account," Guayara said.

"Today the power is in our hands, that of the people," Jose Cruz, a 60-year-old former member of the M-19 urban guerrilla group to which Petro belonged in his youth, told AFP.

Petro's past within M-19, which disbanded in 1990, has been used by critics to suggest he is cozy with the myriad armed groups that still rule large parts of Colombia's northeast and south.

Yann Basset, a professor of political science at the University of Rosario in Bogota, said the Colombian left was long dogged by its association with left-wing guerrillas.

But now "a large part of the population associate it with something else, with the social reforms of the Petro government in particular, and much less with violence."

Petro's failure to broker peace with the country's various cocaine-trafficking armed groups has however tainted his legacy for some left-wing voters.

It has also soured them on Cepeda, a key architect of the peace talks strategy.

Last year was the most violent in the decade since the Marxist rebel army FARC signed a historic peace deal ending half a century of war with the state.

Last weekend, a dissident FARC faction opposed to the peace deal bombed a highway in southern Colombia, killing 21 people, in what it later said was an "error."

The situation has boosted calls for a "mano dura" approach of the kind promoted by de la Espriella and Valencia.

"Security has been terrible in recent years," 18-year-old engineering student Juan Manuel Cespedes said, calling for harsher prison sentences.

Y.Keller--NZN