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Colombia, US discuss drug trafficking, differences remain

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Official White House Photo by Cameron Smith via Flickr.

BOGOTA, Oct 3 (Reuters) – Colombian President Gustavo Petro and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday discussed stepping up intelligence sharing and other drug trafficking measures but announced no agreements and remained at odds on extraditing drug criminals.

Leftist former rebel Mr. Petro, who hosted Mr. Blinken in Bogota, has derided the US-led war on drugs as a failure and called for a new international approach.

In a news conference after their meeting, Mr. Blinken said the two sides were “largely in sync” on the approach to drug trafficking, but there were no indications of new agreements on the issue and they reiterrated divergent views on the extradition of drug criminals.

Mr. Petro said Colombia‘s priorities were the interdiction of drugs before they are shipped out of Colombia and going after those who run the trade, who were likely, he said, to be not in Colombia‘s jungles but in Bogota, Medellin, Miami and even New York.

There were discussions on “doing more in terms of interdicting drugs that are moving on the seas by boat, as well as enhancing even more our intelligence sharing to go after those who are responsible for drug trafficking,” Mr. Blinken said.

He added that Mr. Petro put “concrete ideas on the table” during the talks but made no mention of any specific agreements.

Mr. Blinken is on a week-long trip to Colombia, Chile and Peru, which all have relatively new leftist leaders. Read full story

Mr. Petro repeated criticism of Colombia‘s agreement with Washington on the extradition of drug traffickers. He has proposed that traffickers who comply with government surrender conditions and abandon the trade not be extradited to face charges abroad.

Mr. Blinken responded that extradition between the two countries had benefited justice and the victims of transnational crime.

“It’s one important tool to help dismantle the transnational criminal organizations that do so much damage to both of our societies. And we’ll continue to work closely together on this,” Mr. Blinken said.

Mr. Petro also reiterated criticism of Cuba’s continued inclusion on the US list of state sponsors of promoting terrorism as an injustice, decrying that the decision by former U.S. President Donald Trump to place Cuba back on the list had not been corrected.

Cuba hosted peace talks between the government of former Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and the now demobilized FARC guerrillas.

“That is called an injustice and while in my opinion it isn’t up to us, it should be corrected,” Mr. Petro said. – Reuters

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