Uribe’s post-retirement blues
Thursday, 04 November 2010 08:32 Pablo Rojas Mejia
Despite his immense popularity in Colombia, Alvaro Uribe is facing an array of legal and political problems in his first months out of office. Unfortunately for him, more trouble is sure to come.
A number of weeks ago, I wrote a column about President Juan Manuel Santos’s surprising eagerness (and ability) to lead a government very different in its tone and priorities from that of his wildly popular predecessor, Alvaro Uribe. The divergence really began a few days before Santos was inaugurated, when he began preparing for the resumption of normal diplomatic relations with Venezuela even as Uribe publicly accused Hugo Chavez of supporting the FARC.
Whether or not one believes that there were behind-the-scenes tensions between Uribe and his disciple over the Venezuela issue, it has since become clear that Santos has a significantly different vision for the country than many people imagined. In his first months in office, he has made victims’ rights and compensation a centerpiece of his political agenda. He has continued to engage in friendly and constructive talks with some of Uribe’s left-leaning adversaries in the region, from Venezuela to Ecuador and beyond. As I wrote last week, Santos unexpectedly defied Uribista tradition by intervening in U.S. domestic politics, accusing the Americans of hypocrisy over a ballot initiative to legalize marijuana in California.
Uribe, one can imagine, is just as surprised as anyone about how all of this has turned out. Not too long ago, Uribe had enough political capital to virtually hand-pick his successor, and he chose to back Santos. Now, his former Defense Minister is changing course with remarkable success. Colombians doubtless prefer normal diplomatic relations with Chavez; even if the Venezuelan is a nuisance, he was even more annoying and downright dangerous in combination with the equally aggressive Uribe. Similarly, although there are legitimate disagreements about the victims’ compensation initiatives, fact that Colombia is finally taking serious steps to address the human cost of its armed conflict is a cause for celebration.
More:
http://colombiareports.com/opinion/the-colombiamerican/12737-uribes-post-retirement-blues.html