Four blasts ahead of US summit

PHOTO | AFP
An activist burns an effigy of Uncle Sam during a protest against the VI Summit of the Americas, at the premises of Antioquia University in Medellin, Antioquia department, in Colombia

What you need to know:

  • Bombings reported just hours after Obama’s arrival for talks with Latin American leaders

CARTAGENA, Saturday

Fears of violence marred today’s opening of a summit gathering US President Barack Obama and Latin American leaders when four bombs went off here and in the Colombian capital.

Two of the crude devices exploded in the resort city of Cartagena just hours after the US leader arrived for regional talks set to focus on the vicious drug wars stalking the region.

Two other small bombs exploded near the US Embassy in Bogota, in an area which is also home to important government buildings.

“Nobody was killed, nobody was injured, and there was no damage,” a police official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

It was not immediately clear who carried out the bombings, but Bogota and other major cities have been the site of urban guerrilla attacks for decades.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) – now the Americas longest running insurgency – has been at war with the Colombian government since 1964 and is believed to have 9,000 fighters in mountainous and jungle areas, according to government estimates.

Two issues – the pros and cons of drug legalisation and Cuba’s continued exclusion from the summit – were expected to dominate the summit agenda, highlighting the growing disconnect between Washington and an increasingly assertive and independent Latin American bloc led by powerhouse Brazil.

Before leaving Washington, Obama made it clear in an interview with an association of leading Latin American newspapers, that he rejects the idea of decriminalising drugs.

Washington would not “legalise or decriminalise drugs because doing so would have serious negative consequences in all our countries in terms of public health and safety,” he said.

On Cuba, he insisted that Havana authorities “have shown no interest in changing their relationship with the United States, nor any willingness to respect the democratic and human rights of the Cuban people.”

Cuba has never taken part in a Summit of the Americas. And in early March, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos travelled to the Cuban capital to explain that a lack of consensus had prevented Cuba from being invited this time.

Havana’s exclusion however prompted Ecuador’s Rafael Correa to stay away while Bolivian President Evo Morales said on arrival Friday that he was convinced the summit would be “the last without Cuba.”

There was also uncertainty about the attendance of Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez, who is being treated for cancer.

In another twist, some Secret Service agents sent to Colombia to help protect Obama at the summit have been sent home amid accusations of a sex scandal, officials and reports said Friday.

“There have been allegations of misconduct made against Secret Service personnel in Cartagena, Colombia prior to the president’s trip,” Secret Service special agent in charge Edwin Donovan said in a statement.

He did not specify the allegations, saying the agents had been replaced and stressing it would not endanger Obama’s security.

But at least one of the agents had been involved with prostitutes in the Colombian resort city, the Washington Post said, quoting an official with the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association. (AFP)