Colombia’s inspector general on Sunday called on President Ivan Duque to begin negotiating the demands of strike leaders to end ongoing and massive anti-government protests.
In an interview with news agency Colprensa, Inspector General Fernando Carrillo told Duque to end his resistance and “take the agenda of the 13 points and begin to negotiate them.”
Since ending failed attempts to violently repress the protests, the president has refused to accept demands of the National Strike Committee that effectively seek a dramatic shift in broadly rejected economic and peace policies.
Colombia’s national strike: the social leaders’ demands
But after 18 days of massive protests, Carrillo warned Duque that his refusal to negotiate was eroding his legitimacy as a democratically elected leader.
Inspector General Fernando Carrillo
“It is necessary to dialogue, and if it is necessary to defend some red lines they should be defended, but in a dialogue,” said the Inspector General.
Carrillo and all political parties, with the exception of Duque’s far-right Democratic Center party, have been urging the president to talk with the labor unions, students and indigenous organizations since late last month.
Consequently, Duque’s loyalty to his party’s hard-liners has caused cracks in the president’s minority coalition.
Colombia’s government refuses to accept strike leaders’ demands, or any demand for that matter
Meanwhile, the protests have not lost even a bit of their momentum since they started on November 21, while the president’s disapproval rating has risen to 70%.
According to one poll, more than 75% of Colombians reject how Duque has (mis)handled the protests.