Colombia: president condemns US airstrikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats

Colombia: president condemns US airstrikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats

Colombian president Gustavo Petro has condemned recent US airstrikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean, calling them an ‘act of tyranny’ and urging criminal proceedings against US officials if Colombians were killed. The strikes, authorised by Donald Trump and reportedly responsible for 17 deaths this month, target vessels suspected of trafficking fentanyl and other narcotics, especially near Venezuela, Colombia’s neighbour. Legal experts and UN officials have questioned the legality of these actions, describing them as possible extrajudicial executions. Petro argued that deadly force is unnecessary, citing Colombia’s long history of cooperative drug interdictions without fatalities. He stressed that the principle of proportionality is violated ‘if you use anything more than a pistol’. The White House maintains that Trump will use ‘every element of American power’ to combat narcotics. He has designated several drug-trafficking organisations and criminal groups in Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America as terrorist organisations, and the US military has bolstered its forces in the southern Caribbean over the last two months.

  • Pray: for justice, accountability, and peaceful solutions to international drug trafficking in the Caribbean, without unnecessary loss of life. (Proverbs 23:12)