Pubdate: Fri, 22 Aug 2003 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Gustavo Gallon, Bogota, Colombia Note: Gustavo Gallon is Director, Colombian Commission of Jurists, Bogota, Colombia Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03/n1194/a07.html URIBE'S POLICIES THREATEN COLOMBIA'S DEMOCRACY Re your Aug. 7 editorial Strong steps in Colombia: Many of us question whether Colombian President Alvaro Uribe is the superman that the U.S. press has made him out to be. Uribe's solutions will not help build a more just, democratic and peaceful Colombia. The changes he is trying to implement are profoundly anti-democratic. Colombia's people are sick of violence and desperate for solutions. Understandably, they will buy the Uribe public-relations pitch that one man can save Colombia. Reality is different. Uribe's hard-line approach is inhumane, ineffective and a threat to the rule of law. His proposals -- to give police and military new powers to arrest, search and place wiretaps without warrants; the increasing use of arbitrary detentions; accusations that nongovernmental groups are guerrilla fronts, and the neglect of the growing internal refugee population -- are likely to distance many from the government and create new recruits for guerrillas, paramilitaries and drug gangs. In the 12 months up to June 30, 6,978 Colombians were killed or "disappeared" for sociopolitical reasons, some 75 percent in noncombat situations. The average number of people killed per day was 19. This rate is higher than it was just three years earlier. The annual death toll has nearly doubled in the last four years. Senior Colombian figures and the media are starting to speak out. Jaime Araujo, constitutional court magistrate, last week accused the Uribe administration of creating "an authoritarian state." A Colombian foundation, Security and Democracy, has questioned government statistics showing that military operations are dramatically more effective. Last month Colombia's Semana magazine documented how the AUC paramilitaries are strengthening in regions retaken by the military. Many fear that the peace process will simply allow AUC members to formalize their ties to Colombian security forces by entering Uribe's new "peasant soldier" units. History has taught us that authoritarian states constructed through democratic means are just as dangerous as those brought about by violent coup. Colombians are right to express their fears; it is the only way that they will protect their country and fragile democracy. Gustavo Gallon, Bogota, Colombia - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake