Pubdate: Sat, 27 May 2006 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Jose De Cordoba BUSH ALLY FACES A CRITICAL TEST Colombian president Alvaro Uribe, one of Washington's closest allies in Latin America, is a heavy favorite to win re-election Sunday, which would break a string of victories by populist candidates elsewhere in the region. The latest polls give Mr. Uribe, who pushed through an amendment to Colombia's constitution last year to permit presidential re-election, 56% of the vote against 24% for his closest rival, Sen. Carlos Gaviria, the candidate of the left-wing Alternative Democratic Pole party. Mr. Gaviria, a former Supreme Court justice, has surged past Horacio Serpa, who is running for the third time as the candidate of the once-dominant but now anemic Liberal Party. Many Latin American nations bar presidential second terms because of the region's history of autocratic leaders. A win by Mr. Uribe, an outspoken conservative, would be welcomed in Washington, which has been hard put to stop a tide of populist victories that has roiled the region in recent months. In December Bolivia's populist Evo Morales, a close ally of Venezuela's populist president, Hugo Chavez, won a landslide victory. This month, Mr. Morales nationalized Bolivia's natural-gas industry. Voters are expected to reward Mr. Uribe, 53 years old and a workaholic provincial lawyer, for a markedly improved security situation since he donned the presidential sash in 2002, and for an improving economy. Fueled by the country's billion-dollar drug trade, left-wing insurgents from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, Latin America's largest and oldest guerrilla army, seemed to be getting the upper hand in their decades-long struggle against the Colombian government before Mr. Uribe took office. Mr. Uribe levied a war tax and has used about $3 billion in U.S. antinarcotics and military aid to beef up and professionalize a once-anemic army. Since then, the army has gone on the offensive against the left-wing rebels, driving them back into remote and underpopulated jungle zones mostly in the south and east. Mr. Uribe also negotiated with right-wing paramilitary groups, many of whom are considered terrorists and drug traffickers by the U.S., persuading them to lay down their arms in exchange for leniency for their crimes. More than 30,000 paramilitary combatants have taken advantage of Mr. Uribe's offer. While FARC's 17,000 fighters refuse to negotiate, a smaller leftist group, the National Liberation Army, is negotiating with the government to demobilize. The program is controversial among human-rights advocates, because former combatants will get short prison terms and then be eligible for government retraining. With their crimes all but forgiven and fortunes intact, the critics say, Mr. Uribe's policy will turn former drug lords into a powerful political class, while rank-and-file fighters will turn to crime to survive. For now, though, violence is declining sharply, and foreign investment is coming into the country. Colombia's economy has expanded more than 4% annually for the past three years. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek