Colombia's Ingrid Betancourt announces presidential bid
Ingrid Betancourt, a Colombian politician who was kidnapped and held hostage for six years by an armed rebel group, has launched a fresh bid for the presidency.
The announcement comes almost two decades after the former congresswoman was kidnapped by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in 2002 while campaigning for Colombia’s top office.
The leader of the Oxygen Green Party, Betancourt told reporters on Tuesday that she would vie to become the nominee to represent centrist parties in the race. If she wins the nomination, she will contest the first-round presidential election on May 29.
“Today I am here to finish off what I started with many of you in 2002,” the 60-year-old said during a news conference. “I am here to claim the rights of 51 million Colombians who are not finding justice because we live in a system designed to reward criminals.”
Betancourt’s bid for the presidency comes after Colombia was rocked by mass protests last year demanding government action to address education, healthcare, poverty, police violence and other social issues.
Rights groups and international observers have accused the Colombian security forces of committing “serious” human rights violations during a crackdown on the demonstrations, which began in April 2021 over a tax reform proposal. Last month, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said government agents used “unnecessary or disproportionate force” during the protests.
Betancourt’s announcement also comes months after other candidates have already been campaigning throughout the country ahead of the presidential vote later this year.
Gustavo Petro, a leftist former mayor of Bogota who is currently ahead in the polls, has tapped into widespread frustration with corruption and economic inequalities that have soared during the coronavirus pandemic.
Al Jazeera’s Alessandro Rampietti, reporting from Colombia’s capital, Bogota, said many people in the country were surprised by Betancourt’s decision to run for office.
“It comes at a critical time in the country, when Colombians are extremely angry at the political establishment, at the increase in violence,” Rampietti said, adding that the electorate remains deeply divided. Read More…