How Colombia’s government officials led a political warfare campaign against journalists

Top Colombian government officials are behind a collective of far-right activists that has been behind online attacks on journalists and critics of President Ivan Duque.

Since September last year, the collective has coordinately tried to manipulate the public debate on Twitter while engaging in political warfare against journalists and critics of Duque and his political patron, former President Alvaro Uribe.

The fake lawyer leading the political warfare team

President Ivan Duque (L) and Orlando consul Claudia Bustamante.

Journalist collective The League Against Silence found that the group was founded on September 7 last year by Orlando consul Claudia Bustamante two days after a meeting between Uribe and some 50 activists.

Bustamante was reprimanded by the National Police ahead of the 2018 elections for spreading disinformation when she unsuccessfully ran for the senate.

Duque appointed the far-right activist consul less than a month after he took office in August 2018 despite her also having lied about having a law degree.

How to screw up a covert operation in 10 days

Victor Muñoz (Image: President’s Office)

While pursuing an almost uniquely partisan agenda, the group received the support of top government officials.

Among the 88 members of the Whatsapp group from where attacks were coordinated were four presidential aides, three congressional aides and two Democratic Center party executives.

The members of the group had a combined audience of 600,000 followers on Twitter.

Their offensives were supported by Democratic Center lawmakers like Fernando Araujo. Maria Fernanda Cabal, Ruby Chagui, Paloma Valencia, Margarita Restrepo, Ernesto Macías, Carlos Fernando Mejia, Maria del Rosario Guerra, Gabriel Santos and Jaime Amin.

The team’s effort to operate covertly failed almost instantly however.

Three days after the group was formed, administrator Victor Muñoz, the president’s Innovation and Digital Transformation adviser, was forced to resign after his participation in the group’s smear campaign against W Radio was discovered.

Bustamante closed the group a week later, but its members continue to carry out coordinated attacks until today.


The leading political warriors


The goals and targets

Between the formation of the Whatsapp group and January, the “influencers” in the group targeted primarily media and journalists who had been critical of Duque or Uribe.

Additionally, the original group members coordinately defended the former president while he was in court for an ongoing fraud and bribery investigation in October and stigmatized anti-government protests in November.

Claudia Bustamante

Targeted media and journalists

Source: La Liga Contra el Silencio

Party above ethics

Experts consulted by the League Against Silence agreed that the far-right party’s online political warfare campaign is unethical at the least. The involvement of government officials violates principles of democracy, they agreed.

Government officials leading a political warfare campaign “is extremely serious in regards to democracy and democratic guarantees,” according to Carolina Botero of the Karisma Foundation, an NGO specializing in the defense of human rights online.

Karisma Foundation director Carolina Botero

“They are conspiring to distribute disinformation with a common but sophisticated strategy,” according to Estaban Ponce, a disinformation specialist of the Atlantic Council.

“In the real world this should be illegal and even a scuff against the freedom of expression, because the public is being manipulated by these accounts,” Ponce added.

Journalist Jose Luis Peñarrenonda

Government officials evading responsibility

The officials contacted by the journalists evaded all responsibility if not any contact with the journalists.

Bustamante, who did not avoid the journalists or immediately call a defense attorney, said that “I am not authorized to talk about these things.”

When she was asked who could authorize her to talk, she said “Nobody, because this is an issue that has nothing to do with my consular position.”

The influencers in the group went on the offensive after they had been exposed, inviting other far-right crazies on Twitter to join the “Uribista” disinformation team.

Related posts

Colombia’s prosecution confirms plea deal with jailed former UNGRD chiefs

Arsonists set home of Colombia’s land restitution chief on fire

Colombia and Russia “reactivate” bilateral ties