Petro ‘declared war’ when he was dismissed: Santos

Juan Manuel Santos (L) and Gustavo Petro

Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos said on Tuesday that former Bogota mayor Gustavo Petro ‘virtually declared war’ when he was dismissed.

Petro was dismissed from office this March by the inspector general, due to “irregularities” with the transfer of  garbage collection from a private to public operation, in 2012. The dismissal was sanctioned in spite of attempts from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to keep him in office.

MORE: Not so fast: International Court rushes to Bogota Mayor’s aid and demands Petro stay in office

In interview with Caracol Radio Santos defended his decision to dismiss the former mayor to Caracol, stating that although he had not liked Inspector General Alejandro Ordeñez’s decision, he had to defend the institutions that are the foundation of the Colombian judicial system. “The law is the law and must be applied,” he said.

When the Colombian president informed Petro of his decision to sign the dismissal, relations quickly broke down. Petro behaved “aggressively,” and “virtually declared war,” a reaction which seemed “exaggerated” to Santos.

MORE: The end of Petro: Bogota’s mayor to leave office

Petro took to his Twitter page a few hours after Santos’s interview.

“I did not declare war. I declare peace. The only war valid in Colombia is the war against corruption, Mr. President.”

 

His message on the social media account has already been shared almost a thousand times within two hours.

Sources

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