Foreign relations of Colombia
This article is part of a series on the |
Politics of Colombia |
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Colombia seeks diplomatic and commercial relations with all countries, regardless of their ideologies or political or economic systems. For this reason, the Colombian economy is quite open, relying on international trade and following guidelines given by international law.
Since 2008, Colombia's Ministry of Trade and Commerce has either reached or strengthened Bilateral Trade Agreements with South Korea, Japan and China[1] building stronger commerce interchange and development in the Pacific Rim.
Regional relations have also vastly improved under the Santos Administration (2010–2018). Issues however remain regarding spillover of the FARC leftist-terrorist group, being chased out of hiding in rural areas of Colombia and finding safe havens in non-monitored areas of bordering states. The FARC numbers have significantly diminished in the last decade, to an estimated 5,000–7,000. And while joint military collaboration has steadily increased with the bordering countries of Brazil, Panama, Peru, and Venezuela, there have been tensions between Colombia and Ecuador regarding the issue. In 2002, the Ecuadorian government closed its main border crossing with Colombia, restricting its hours of operation. Ecuador continues to voice its concerns over an influx of émigrés stemming from guerilla activity at its borders. Evidence has since emerged however, suggesting that a significant number of the FARC's foot soldiers in and around the Colombia–Ecuador border consist of Ecuadorian émigrés who joined the leftist terrorist group out of need.[2] Returning Ecuadorian émigrés have faced re-entry restrictions.
In 2012, relations with Nicaragua and Venezuela were tested over territorial island disputes. Bilateral committees are negotiating the dispute with Venezuela over waters in the Gulf of Venezuela.
Background
[edit]In 1969, Colombia formed what is now the Andean Community along with Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, and Peru (Venezuela joined in 1973, and Chile left in 1976).
In the 1980s, Colombia broadened its bilateral and multilateral relations, joining the Contadora Group, the Group of Eight (now the Rio Group), and the Non-Aligned Movement, which it chaired from 1994 until September 1998. In addition, it has signed free trade agreements with Chile, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Colombia has traditionally played an active role in the United Nations and the Organization of American States and in their subsidiary agencies. Former President César Gaviria became Secretary General of the OAS in September 1994 and was reelected in 1999. Colombia was a participant in the December 1994 and April 1998 Summits of the Americas and followed up on initiatives developed at the summit by hosting two post-summit, ministerial-level meetings on trade and science and technology.
Colombia regularly participates in international fora, including CICAD, the Organization of American States' body on money laundering, chemical controls, and drug abuse prevention. Although the Colombian Government ratified the 1988 UN Convention on Narcotics in 1994—the last of the Andean governments to do so—it took important reservations, notably to the anti-money-laundering measures, asset forfeiture and confiscation provisions, maritime interdiction, and extradition clauses. Colombia subsequently withdrew some of its reservations, most notably a reservation on extradition.
International relations
[edit]Disputes – international
[edit]Maritime boundary dispute with Venezuela in the Gulf of Venezuela; territorial disputes with Nicaragua over Archipelago de San Andrés y Providencia and Quita Sueño Bank.[3] The United States disputes sovereignty with Colombia over the Serranilla Bank and the Bajo Nuevo Bank. Quita Sueño Bank is claimed by the United States to be a submerged reef, and thus does not recognize the sovereignty of any nation over the bank.
Membership of international organizations
[edit]The major organizations in which Colombia is a member include: the Agency for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean, Andean Pact, Caribbean Development Bank Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Group of 3, Group of 11, Group of 24, Group of 77, Inter-American Development Bank, International Atomic Energy Agency, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, International Chamber of Commerce, International Civil Aviation Organization, International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol), International Development Association, International Finance Corporation, International Fund for Agricultural Development, International Labour Organization, International Maritime Organization, International Maritime Satellite Organization, International Monetary Fund (IMF), International Olympic Committee, International Organization for Migration, International Organization for Standardization, International Telecommunication Union, International Telecommunications Satellite Organization, International Trade Union Confederation, Latin American Economic System, Latin American Integration Association, Non-Aligned Movement, Organization of American States (OAS), Permanent Court of Arbitration, Rio Group, United Nations (UN), UN Conference on Trade and Development, UNESCO, UN Industrial Development Organization, UN Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees, Universal Postal Union, World Confederation of Labour, World Federation of Trade Unions, World Health Organization, World Intellectual Property Organization, World Meteorological Organization, World Tourism Organization, and World Trade Organization.[4] An OAS observer has monitored the government's peace process with the paramilitaries, lending the negotiations much-needed international credibility.[4] The United States helps Colombia secure favorable treatment from the IMF.[citation needed]
Major international treaties
[edit]Regional treaties include the Andean Pact, now known as the Andean Community, which also includes Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru, the bodies and institutions making up the Andean Integration System (AIS). Colombia has signed free-trade agreements with Chile, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Its recent trade agreements with Korea, China and Japan, have focused on economic and technical cooperation between those nations.[citation needed] Within the regional Caribbean Community and Common Market (Caricom), Colombia has also deepened economic and medical science research collaboration agreements.[citation needed] Colombia has also signed and ratified 105 international treaties or agreements relating to the protection of the environment.[4] These include the Antarctic Treaty and Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and conventions on Biodiversity, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Marine Life Conservation, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Tropical Timber 83, Tropical Timber 94, and Wetlands.[4] It has signed, but not ratified, the Antarctic-Environmental Protocol and conventions on Law of the Sea and Marine Dumping.[4] Colombia also has signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and the Tlatelolco Treaty.[4] By 1975 signatories to the 1974 Declaration of Ayacucho, of which Colombia was one, had decided on limitations to nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.[4]
Gaining all 186 votes, Colombia served on the U.N. Security Council from 2011 to 2012 representing Latin American and the Caribbean.
Colombia is also a member of the International Criminal Court with a Bilateral Immunity Agreement of protection for the United States-military (as covered under Article 98).
Domestic politics and foreign policy
[edit]International Relations scholars long emphasized international constraints, and particularly Colombia's relationship with the United States, as central to its foreign policy.[5] In terms of foreign policy process, presidents have broad constitutional authorities, in consultation with their foreign ministers. However, since the 2000s, the influence of other domestic actors in Colombian foreign policy-making has increased. Long, Bitar, and Jiménez-Peña examine the role of the Colombian Constitutional Court, congressional politics, social movements, and electoral challengers. They find that Colombian institutions permit increasing challenges to presidential authority, and that in important cases Colombian presidents have been forced to drop their preferred foreign policies.[6]
Diplomatic relations
[edit]List of countries which Colombia maintains diplomatic relations with:
# | Country | Date[7][8][9][10][11] |
---|---|---|
1 | United States | 19 June 1822 |
2 | Peru | 6 July 1822 |
3 | Chile | 21 October 1822 |
4 | Argentina | 8 March 1823 |
5 | Mexico | 3 October 1823 |
6 | Guatemala | 8 March 1825 |
7 | El Salvador | 8 March 1825 |
8 | Honduras | 8 March 1825 |
9 | Nicaragua | 8 March 1825 |
10 | United Kingdom | 18 April 1825[12] |
11 | Netherlands | 1 May 1829[13] |
12 | Venezuela | 27 November 1831 |
13 | Ecuador | 10 February 1832 |
— | Holy See | 26 November 1835[14] |
14 | Costa Rica | 11 June 1856 |
15 | Portugal | 9 April 1857 |
16 | Italy | 13 March 1864 |
17 | Paraguay | 27 July 1870 |
18 | Belgium | 1873 |
19 | Germany | 1 June 1872 |
20 | Sweden | 11 December 1874 |
21 | Spain | 30 January 1881 |
22 | Uruguay | 25 August 1888 |
23 | France | 30 May 1892[15] |
24 | Cuba | 1902 |
25 | Brazil | 24 April 1907 |
26 | Switzerland | 14 March 1908 |
27 | Japan | 25 May 1908[16] |
28 | Bolivia | 19 March 1912 |
29 | Austria | 10 January 1920 |
30 | Panama | 9 July 1924[17] |
31 | Denmark | 18 May 1931 |
32 | Poland | 18 November 1933[18] |
33 | Czech Republic | 11 June 1934[19] |
34 | Russia | 25 June 1935 |
35 | Norway | 6 September 1935 |
36 | Haiti | 7 August 1936[20] |
37 | Dominican Republic | 1936 |
38 | Ethiopia | 1 January 1937 |
39 | Greece | 1 January 1942 |
40 | Philippines | 1 January 1946 |
41 | Lebanon | 14 June 1949 |
42 | Canada | 6 October 1952[21] |
— | Sovereign Military Order of Malta | 28 January 1953 |
43 | Finland | 26 May 1954 |
44 | Egypt | 23 January 1957 |
— | Israel (suspended) | 1 July 1957[22] |
45 | Turkey | 10 April 1959 |
46 | India | 19 January 1959 |
47 | South Korea | 10 March 1962 |
48 | Kuwait | 26 December 1964 |
49 | Ivory Coast | 22 February 1965[23] |
50 | Rwanda | 22 February 1965 |
51 | Jamaica | 24 February 1965 |
52 | Cyprus | 11 February 1966 |
53 | Serbia | December 1966 |
54 | Romania | 15 November 1967 |
55 | Trinidad and Tobago | 22 February 1968 |
56 | Pakistan | 19 June 1970 |
57 | Guyana | 18 December 1970 |
58 | Luxembourg | 21 April 1971[24] |
59 | Barbados | 1 February 1972 |
60 | Cambodia | 16 December 1972 |
61 | Hungary | 28 March 1973 |
62 | Bulgaria | 8 May 1973 |
63 | Australia | 9 January 1975 |
64 | Kenya | 27 January 1975 |
65 | Iran | 28 April 1975 |
66 | United Arab Emirates | 1 January 1976 |
67 | Bahamas | 16 August 1977 |
68 | New Zealand | 1 May 1978 |
69 | Suriname | 22 June 1978[25] |
70 | Algeria | 1 January 1979 |
71 | Iraq | 1 January 1979 |
72 | Morocco | 1 January 1979 |
73 | Nigeria | 1 January 1979 |
74 | Vietnam | 1 January 1979 |
75 | Thailand | 22 January 1979 |
76 | Albania | 5 December 1979 |
77 | China | 7 February 1980 |
78 | Indonesia | 15 September 1980 |
79 | Dominica | 9 December 1980 |
80 | Grenada | 9 January 1981 |
81 | Tunisia | 20 January 1981 |
82 | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 17 March 1981 |
83 | Equatorial Guinea | 6 May 1981[26] |
84 | Gabon | 14 July 1981 |
85 | Senegal | 1 August 1981[27] |
86 | Iceland | 11 September 1981 |
87 | Tanzania | 28 October 1981[28] |
88 | Belize | 15 February 1982 |
89 | Antigua and Barbuda | 18 March 1982 |
90 | Saint Lucia | 18 March 1982 |
91 | Jordan | 22 October 1982 |
92 | Singapore | 15 December 1982 |
93 | Saint Kitts and Nevis | 1 January 1984 |
94 | Bangladesh | 14 February 1984 |
— | Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic | 27 February 1984[29] |
95 | Oman | 1 August 1985 |
96 | Malta | 16 April 1986 |
97 | Nepal | 6 May 1987 |
98 | Mauritania | 1 July 1987 |
99 | Cape Verde | 27 July 1987[30] |
100 | Malaysia | 19 August 1987 |
101 | Fiji | 10 September 1987 |
102 | Samoa | 1 December 1987 |
103 | Papua New Guinea | 2 March 1988 |
104 | Zambia | 21 April 1988 |
105 | Angola | 29 April 1988 |
106 | Mozambique | 10 May 1988[30] |
107 | Syria | 24 May 1988 |
108 | Ghana | 23 June 1988 |
109 | Seychelles | 5 August 1988[30] |
110 | Mongolia | 8 August 1988 |
111 | São Tomé and Príncipe | 12 August 1988[30] |
112 | Maldives | 14 August 1988 |
113 | Burkina Faso | 27 September 1988[30] |
114 | Liberia | 28 September 1988 |
115 | Chad | 29 September 1988[30] |
116 | Djibouti | 29 September 1988[30] |
117 | Mali | 29 September 1988 |
118 | Togo | 29 September 1988[30] |
119 | Guinea | 30 September 1988[30] |
120 | Laos | 30 September 1988 |
121 | Mauritius | 30 September 1988 |
122 | Sri Lanka | 30 September 1988 |
123 | Central African Republic | 3 October 1988[30] |
124 | Comoros | 3 October 1988[30] |
125 | Gambia | 3 October 1988[30] |
126 | Somalia | 3 October 1988[30] |
127 | Sudan | 3 October 1988[30] |
128 | Yemen | 3 October 1988 |
129 | Niger | 5 October 1988 |
130 | Zimbabwe | 10 October 1988 |
131 | North Korea | 24 October 1988[30] |
132 | Burundi | 11 November 1988[30] |
133 | Sierra Leone | 16 November 1988[30] |
134 | Myanmar | 22 November 1988 |
135 | Benin | 30 November 1988[30] |
136 | Cameroon | 8 March 1989[30] |
137 | Guinea-Bissau | 23 March 1989[30] |
138 | Bahrain | 18 April 1989 |
139 | Uganda | 5 May 1989[30] |
140 | Botswana | 25 April 1990[30] |
141 | Namibia | 28 April 1990[30] |
142 | Afghanistan | 3 August 1990 |
143 | Brunei | 24 March 1992 |
144 | Kazakhstan | 23 July 1992 |
145 | Marshall Islands | 5 August 1992[31] |
146 | Ukraine | 20 August 1992 |
147 | Federated States of Micronesia | 8 September 1992[32] |
148 | Belarus | 9 December 1992 |
149 | Slovakia | 1 January 1993 |
150 | Lithuania | 5 August 1993 |
151 | Kyrgyzstan | 6 October 1993 |
152 | Estonia | 23 March 1994 |
153 | South Africa | 12 April 1994 |
154 | Slovenia | 19 July 1994 |
155 | Azerbaijan | 13 December 1994 |
156 | Armenia | 22 December 1994 |
157 | Eritrea | 22 December 1994[30] |
158 | Croatia | 25 April 1995 |
159 | Qatar | 9 May 1995 |
160 | Madagascar | 15 June 1995[30] |
161 | Latvia | 19 July 1995[30] |
162 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 19 October 1995 |
163 | Andorra | 27 November 1995 |
164 | Libya | 16 May 1996 |
165 | Turkmenistan | 27 August 1996 |
166 | Georgia | 6 June 1997 |
167 | Moldova | 14 October 1997 |
168 | Malawi | 30 March 1998 |
169 | Lesotho | 17 April 1998 |
170 | Republic of the Congo | 1 July 1999 |
171 | Ireland | 10 November 1999 |
172 | North Macedonia | 22 June 2000 |
173 | Monaco | 15 December 2000 |
174 | Liechtenstein | 24 October 2001 |
175 | San Marino | 15 April 2002 |
176 | East Timor | 20 May 2002 |
177 | Montenegro | 12 August 2011 |
178 | Saudi Arabia | 8 September 2011 |
179 | Tuvalu | 3 April 2012 |
180 | Uzbekistan | 2 October 2012 |
181 | Tajikistan | 5 October 2012 |
182 | Bhutan | 21 December 2012 |
— | State of Palestine | 6 August 2018[33][34] |
— | Kosovo | 3 March 2019 |
183 | Solomon Islands | 23 September 2024[35] |
Bilateral relations
[edit]Americas
[edit]Country | Formal relations began | Notes |
---|---|---|
Argentina | 8 March 1823 |
|
Bolivia | 19 March 1912 | See Bolivia–Colombia relations
|
Brazil | 24 April 1907 | See Brazil–Colombia relations |
Canada | 6 October 1952 | See Canada–Colombia relations |
Chile | 21 October 1822 | See Chile–Colombia relations
Both nations are members of the Pacific Alliance.
|
Ecuador | 10 February 1832 | See Colombia–Ecuador relations
Present-day Colombia and Ecuador trace back established official diplomatic relations to December, 1831 with the signing of the Treaty of Pasto, in which both countries recognized each other as sovereign states. The Ecuadorean diplomatic mission in New Granada (Colombia) did not open until 1837. It wasn't until 1939 that Ecuador raised the diplomatic mission's status to an official embassy. Colombia did the same the following year, in 1940.[39]
|
Guyana | 18 December 1970 |
|
Mexico | 3 October 1823 | See Colombia–Mexico relations
|
Nicaragua | 8 March 1825 | See Colombia–Nicaragua relations
The relationship between the two Latin American countries has evolved amid conflicts over the San Andrés y Providencia Islands located in the Caribbean close to the Nicaraguan shoreline and the maritime boundaries covering 150,000 km2 (57,915 sq mi) that included the islands of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina and the banks of Roncador, Serrana, Serranilla and Quitasueño as well as the arbitrarily designed 82nd meridian west which Colombia claims as a border but which the International Court has sided with Nicaragua in disavowing.[43]
|
Panama | 9 July 1924 | See Colombia–Panama relations
|
Paraguay | 27 July 1870 | See Colombia–Paraguay relations
|
Peru | 6 July 1822 | See Colombia–Peru relations
Both nations are members of the Pacific Alliance. |
United States | 19 June 1822 | See Colombia–United States relations
The country traditionally has had good relations with the United States. Relations were strained during the presidency of Ernesto Samper (1994–98) due to accusations of receiving illegal campaign funding from the Cali Cartel. Relations between the two countries greatly improved during the Pastrana administration (1998–2002). In January 2000, the Clinton administration pledged more than US$1 billion of mainly military assistance to Colombia to assist the antidrug component of President Pastrana's strategy known as Plan Colombia. Relations with the United States became a foreign policy priority for the Uribe administration, and Colombia became an important ally in the "War on Terrorism". In March 2002, in response to a request from U.S. President George W. Bush, the U.S. Congress lifted restrictions on U.S. assistance to Colombia to allow it to be used for counterinsurgency in addition to antidrug operations. U.S. support for Colombia's antidrug-trafficking efforts included slightly more than US$2.5 billion between 2000 and 2004, as compared with only about US$300 million in 1998. Some critics of current US policies in Colombia, such as Law Professor John Barry, claim that US influences have catalyzed internal conflicts. Colombia rejects threats and blackmail of the United States of America after the threat of Donald Trump to decertify the country as a partner in counter-narcotics efforts.[44]
Latin America rejects Trump's military threat against Venezuela.[45] Brazil, Colombia and other countries in the region prefer to play a constructive role that would prevent a civil war in Venezuela.[46] Colombia's Foreign Ministry said that all efforts to resolve Venezuela's crisis should be peaceful.[47] Colombia proposed the idea of the Sustainable Development Goals and a final document was adopted by the United Nations.[48]
|
Uruguay | 25 August 1888 | See Colombia–Uruguay relations
|
Venezuela | 27 November 1831 | See Colombia–Venezuela relations
The relationship has developed since the early 16th century, when Spanish empire colonizers created the province of Santa Marta (now Colombia)[unreliable source?][51] and the province of New Andalucia (now Venezuela).[52] The countries share a history for achieving their independence under Simón Bolívar and becoming one nation—the Gran Colombia—which dissolved in the 19th century.[53] Following then, the overall relationship between the two countries has vacillated between cooperation and bilateral struggle. In February 2019, Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro cut diplomatic relations with Colombia after Colombian President Ivan Duque helped Venezuelan opposition politicians deliver humanitarian aid to their country. Colombia recognized Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido as the country's legitimate president. In January 2020, Colombia rejected Maduro's proposal that the two countries restore diplomatic relations.[54] Following the election of Colombian President Gustavo Petro, the two countries restored diplomatic relations in August 2022.[55] |
Asia
[edit]Country | Formal Relations Began | Notes |
---|---|---|
Armenia | 22 December 1994 |
Both countries established diplomatic relations on December 22, 1994.[56]
|
Azerbaijan | 13 December 1994 | See Azerbaijan–Colombia relations |
China | 7 February 1980 | See China–Colombia relations |
India | 19 January 1959 |
The relationship between the two countries has been gradually increasing with more frequent diplomatic visits to promote political, commercial cultural and academic exchanges. Colombia is currently the commercial point of entry into Latin America for Indian companies.[58] |
Indonesia | 15 September 1980 |
Both countries are members of the Non-Aligned Movement, the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council, the Cairns Group, and the CIVETS block.
|
Israel | 1 July 1957 Diplomatic Severed in 1 May 2024 |
In an article in the Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs, Marcos Peckel, a Colombian scholar noted that Colombian-Israeli relations can be looked through the lenses of military cooperation, trade links, education and culture, and recognition of Palestine.[62] Militarily, Colombia was one of the first countries to give Israel weapons and engage in arms deals, which has since been an ongoing bilateral agreement. Since, Israel and Colombia have shared intelligence, and as Peckel explains, several pieces of Israeli technology. Trade-wise, too, both countries have a strong relationship. The Free Trade Agreement, a pending agreement between Colombia and Israel, has the potential to further strengthen these relationships by boosting Colombian imports in Israel and increasing the presence of Israeli technology in Colombia. The spheres of education and culture between Colombia and Israel are deeply interwoven through Israeli scholarships to Colombians and a presence of media in each country. "Colombia supports the establishment of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel within mutually agreed-upon borders. It considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal but strongly condemns Palestinian terrorism, and it advocates for a lasting peace based on the two-state solution". On resolutions in the UN General Assembly that compared Zionism to racism and wanted to establish a "right to return" for Palestinians, Colombia abstained. In 2018, Colombia officially recognized the State of Palestine. Despite creating a bump in the relations between the countries, the two have re-established strong relations. On 1 May 2024 Colombia broke diplomatic ties with Israel as a result of the 2023 Israel-Hamas war.
|
Japan | 25 May 1908 |
The relationship was officially established in 1908, only interrupted between 1942 and 1954 with the surge of World War II. Relations are mostly based on commercial trade that has favored Japan interests, cultural exchanges and technological and philanthropic aid to Colombia.[63]
|
Malaysia | 19 August 1987[64] | Ambassador of Colombia in Malaysia also accredited to Vietnam, while Malaysian Embassy in Lima, Peru, accredited to Colombia. Both are members of United Nations, Movement of Non-Aligned Cooperation Forum Asia-Latin America (FEALAC) and Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC).
|
Pakistan | 19 June 1970 |
Both Pakistan and Colombia do not enjoy cordial dealings with some of their neighbours. Another common aspect that makes the task of both Colombian and Pakistan Armed forces even tougher is the difficult terrain they have been encountering. Poverty, income inequality, destruction and degradation of other vital organs of the state have consequently been the natural by-products of insubordination and rebellions in both Colombia and Pakistan. Both the countries have similar Gross Domestic Products (GDPs) too. While the Colombian Purchasing Power Parity GDP stands at $460.406 billion, Pakistan s GDP stands at $464.897 billion (latest IMF statistics). Like Colombia, Pakistan too also witnesses a large presence of the US military personnel and civilian contractors on its territory. Colombia established diplomatic relations with Pakistan in 1980, but bilateral trade between the two countries was negligible which needed to be improved for the benefit of both nations.
|
Philippines | 1 January 1946 | See Colombia-Philippines relations
|
South Korea | 10 March 1962[65] | See Colombia–South Korea relations
|
Turkey | 10 April 1959[66] | See Colombia–Turkey relations |
Europe
[edit]Under the Uribe administration, Colombia's relations with the European Union (EU) have been cordial. Representatives of the EU have been critical of Colombia's antiguerrilla and antidrug strategies in several respects. The EU is particularly concerned about the potential for increased human rights abuses within Colombia at the hands of both government forces and illegal armed groups, and it has continued to distance itself from Plan Colombia. The EU is in favor of a negotiated solution to the nation's internal conflict. EU aid to Colombia has mainly consisted of social, economic and development investments.
In 2004, the EU as an entity did not offer unrestricted support for the Uribe government's peace initiative with paramilitaries, citing concerns over the possible lack of a credible and comprehensive peace strategy and its application, but it did approve US$2 million in aid for the process. Individual EU members such Sweden, Italy, Germany and the Netherlands also provided limited support on their own.[68]
Country | Formal relations began | Notes |
---|---|---|
Andorra | 27 November 1995 |
In February 2013, Colombia's Foreign Minister at the time made an official visit to Andorra in order to strengthen relations between the two countries.[69] |
Austria | 10 January 1920 | See Austria–Colombia relations
|
Belarus | 9 December 1992 |
On May 19, 1998, Colombia and Belarus signed a collaboration agreement between both countries.[70]
|
Belgium | 1873 | |
Czech Republic | January 1993 |
|
France | 30 May 1892 | See Colombia–France relations
Officially the relations between Colombian and France began on May 30, 1892, with the signature of an agreement intended to establish French nationals in Colombia, increase commerce and navigation between the two nations.[78]
|
Germany | 1 June 1872 | See Colombia–Germany relations |
Hungary | 28 March 1973 | See Colombia–Hungary relations
|
Iceland | 11 September 1981 | |
Ireland | 10 November 1999 | See Colombia–Ireland relations |
Italy | 13 March 1864 | See Colombia–Italy relations |
Kosovo | 3 March 2019 |
|
Liechtenstein | 24 October 2001 | |
Monaco | 15 December 2000 |
Colombia and Monaco first stablished diplomatic relations in December 2000. In 2012, Colombia's ambassador to France at the time, presented to Monaco its credentials becoming the first non-resident ambassador to the country.[87] |
Netherlands | 1 May 1829 |
On 16 and 17 February 2022 president Iván Duque visited the Netherlands. There were talks about trade and judicial cooperation. Also a bilateral treaty for the elimination of double taxation with respect to taxes on income and the prevention of tax evasion and avoidance was signed by Dutch PM Mark Rutte and president Duque.[88]
|
Poland | 18 November 1933 | See Colombia–Poland relations
|
Portugal | 9 April 1857 |
|
Russia | 25 June 1935 | See Colombia–Russia relations
|
Serbia | December 1966 |
|
Spain | 30 January 1881 | See Colombia–Spain relations
|
Sweden | 11 December 1874 | |
United Kingdom | 18 April 1825 | Colombia established diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom on 18 April 1825.[12]
Both countries share common membership of the OECD, and the World Trade Organization, as well as the Andean countries–UK Free Trade Agreement.[95] Bilaterally the two countries have an Investment Agreement,[96] and a Security Agreement.[97] |
Oceania
[edit]Country | Formal relations began | Notes |
---|---|---|
Australia | 9 January 1975 | |
New Zealand | 1 May 1978 | See Colombia–New Zealand relations |
Transnational issues
[edit]This article needs to be updated.(November 2010) |
Narcotics and terrorism
[edit]By the 1990s, Colombia had become the world's leading supplier of refined cocaine and a growing source for heroin. More than 90% of the cocaine that entered in the 1990s the United States was produced, processed, or transshipped in Colombia. The cultivation of coca dropped between 1995 and 1999 from 3,020 to 1,100 km2 (425 sq mi), primarily in areas where government control was more active.
Despite the death of Medellín cartel drug kingpin Pablo Escobar in 1993 and the arrests of major Cali cartel leaders in 1995 and 1996, Colombian drug cartels remain among the most sophisticated criminal organizations in the world, controlling cocaine processing, international wholesale distribution chains, and markets. In 1999 Colombian police arrested over 30 narcotraffickers, most of them extraditable, in "Operation Millennium" involving extensive international cooperation. More arrests were made in a following "Operation Millennium II."
Colombia is engaged in a broad range of narcotics control activities. Through aerial spraying of herbicide and manual eradication, Colombia has attempted to keep coca, opium poppy, and cannabis cultivation from expanding. The government has committed itself to the eradication of all illicit crops, interdiction of drug shipments, and financial controls to prevent money laundering. Alternative development programs were introduced in 1999.
Corruption and intimidation by traffickers complicate the drug-control efforts of the institutions of government. Colombia passed revised criminal procedures code in 1993 that permits traffickers to surrender and negotiate lenient sentences in return for cooperating with prosecutors. In December 1996 and February 1997, however, the Colombian Congress passed legislation to toughen sentencing, asset forfeiture, and money-laundering penalties.
In November 1997, the Colombian Congress amended the constitution to permit the extradition of Colombian nationals, albeit not retroactively. In late 1999, President Pastrana authorized the first extradition in almost 10 years of a Colombian trafficker to stand trial for U.S. crimes. Three such extraditions to the United States have taken place, the most recent in August 2000, with cases against others pending in Colombian courts. Under the Pastrana administration, Plan Colombia was developed and implemented with U.S. backing.[102]
During the presidency of Álvaro Uribe, the government applied more military pressure on the FARC and other outlawed groups. After the offensive, many security indicators improved. Colombia achieved a great decrease in cocaine production, leading White House drug czar R. Gil Kerlikowske to announce that Colombia is no longer the world's biggest producer of cocaine.[103][104]
In addition to the challenge posed to the United States by Colombian drug trafficking, illegal Colombian immigrants in the United States are an issue in Colombia-U.S. relations. According to figures from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Colombia is the fourth-leading source country of illegal immigration to the United States. According to its estimates, the number of illegal Colombian residents in the United States almost tripled from 51,000 in 1990 to 141,000 in 2000.[105] According to the US Census Bureau, the number of authorized Colombian immigrants in the United States in 2006 was 801,363.[106]
Colombia rejected threats and blackmail of the United States of America after the threat of Donald Trump to decertify the country as a partner in counter-narcotics efforts.[44]
For more than 30 years Colombia has demonstrated its commitment – paying a very high cost in human lives – with overcoming the drug problem. This commitment stems from the profound conviction that the consumption, production and trafficking of drugs constitute a serious threat to the well-being and security of citizens. Colombia is undoubtedly the country that has fought the most drugs and with more successes on this front. No one has to threaten us to meet this challenge.
— Colombia’s National Government [44]
The problem of drugs is global. Overcoming it can only be achieved through cooperation and under the principle of joint responsibility. Consumer countries’ authorities have a fundamental responsibility to their fellow citizens and the world to reduce consumption and to attack trafficking and distribution organizations in their own countries.
— Colombia’s National Government [44]
See also
[edit]- List of diplomatic missions in Colombia
- List of diplomatic missions of Colombia
- Security issues in Colombia
References
[edit]- ^ Evan Ellis, Robert (2017). "Chinese Advances and Setbacks in Colombia". IndraStra Global (5): 7.
- ^ United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "Ecuador". United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Retrieved 2013-04-22.
- ^ Long, Tom; Bitar, Sebastián; Jiménez-Peña, Gabriel (2019). "Domestic Contestation and Presidential Prerogative in Colombian Foreign Policy" (PDF). Bulletin of Latin American Research. 39 (4): 10–11. doi:10.1111/blar.12987. ISSN 1470-9856.
- ^ a b c d e f g This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: "Country Profile: Colombia" (PDF). Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. February 2007. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2015-09-27. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
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- ^ Long, Tom; Bitar, Sebastián; Jiménez-Peña, Gabriel (2019). "Domestic Contestation and Presidential Prerogative in Colombian Foreign Policy" (PDF). Bulletin of Latin American Research. 39 (4): 466–482. doi:10.1111/blar.12987. ISSN 1470-9856.
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{{cite book}}
:|website=
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