Pubdate: Sun, 25 Sep 2005 Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) Section: World News Copyright: 2005 PG Publishing Contact: http://www.post-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341 Author: Henry Chu, LA Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COLOMBIA PRESIDENT RIDES POPULARITY WAVE Uribe Widely Seen As Tough-Minded BOGOTA, Colombia -- To hear his critics tell it, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe ought to be in trouble. The foundation of his mandate, a promise to tame this nation's unrelenting civil war, is tottering. Attacks by leftist rebels have surged since the beginning of the year, and hundreds of soldiers have died. Accusations of cronyism and nepotism have dogged his administration, while unemployment and poverty remain stubborn challenges throughout the country. Cocaine continues to be a major export. But with just a year to go before the end of his term, Uribe, 53, is riding a wave of popularity unmatched almost anywhere in the Americas. His approval ratings rarely dip below 70 percent, and are so resistant to criticism and complaints that some have taken to calling him Colombia's Teflon president. Only one other democratically elected leader in the region, Venezuela's populist president, Hugo Chavez, pulls in such impressive numbers. How the center-right Uribe, a Harvard-educated attorney who entered the presidential race four years ago practically as an unknown, has maintained such a high level of support is a testament, analysts say, to his government's single-minded pursuit of public security during his tenure -- and his carefully cultivated image as a tough-minded, hard-working leader and man of the people. "He confronts problems very directly and in direct, colloquial language. He has a great capacity for communication with the ordinary citizen," said Alfredo Rangel, director of the Security and Democracy Foundation, a think tank in Bogota, the Colombian capital. In many ways, Uribe's clear-cut, with-us-or-against-us approach to the battle against Marxist guerrillas and his appeal to patriotism has invited comparisons to President Bush. The two men, both former governors, are staunch allies, and Colombia has received billions of dollars in aid from Washington for its fight against drug trafficking and left-wing guerrillas. Rangel said Uribe's penchant for portraying issues in such stark terms, and the public adulation heaped on him, has had unwelcome effects as well, such as stifling legitimate dissent and criticism. "It has generated an environment where to talk badly about Uribe is seen as being unpatriotic, sort of like it was in the U.S. to criticize the Iraq war," Rangel said. "To talk badly about Uribe is to ruin the collective fiesta. People continue thinking that Uribe is a redeemer, and they want to continue believing in their redeemer." That Uribe's administration has brought about greater social stability is hard to deny. Killings and kidnappings, though still widespread, have fallen since he was elected in 2002; this year's homicide rate is on track to be the lowest in 25 years. Attacks on major urban centers by the left-wing Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, have become rare. Right-wing paramilitary groups are engaged in peace and demobilization talks. State highways previously too dangerous to travel because of the conflict are navigable once again, at least during daylight. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman