Colombia’s inspector general urges political dialogue as tensions over national strike rise

Inspector General Fernando Carrillo (Image: Inspector General's Office)

Colombia’s inspector general urged the government of President Ivan Duque to engage in dialogue with participants in anti-government protests on Thursday amid growing concerns over possible violent repression.

In a passionate editorial published on his website, Inspector General Fernando Carrillo, said that “a strong democracy cannot panic over social protest. It does not delegitimize it, much less belittle it, stigmatize it or distort it with propaganda based on fear.”

Inspector General Fernando Carrillo

Carrillo dismissed conspiracy theories of top government officials that protesters or foreign infiltrators would be seeking violence and urged Duque to see the protests as “an opportunity to listen to the heartbeat of public opinion.”

Inspector General Fernando Carrillo

At the same time, the inspector general called on the political and social leaders promoting the national strike and the protests to reject extremism and violence.

Inspector General Fernando Carrillo

According to Carrilo, Thursday “is not the day to ignite Colombia. It’s not the day of the hooded men hiding their faces to demolish institutions, but the day of the citizen to demand them to be strengthened and deliver social justice.”

The inspector general, who has played an active role in the country’s ongoing peace process, said that his office will guarantee that the national strike “will be a protest to demand social responses without violence and not a fatal ambush on democracy.”

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