logo
China not trying to 'replace' US in Colombia: ambassador

China not trying to 'replace' US in Colombia: ambassador

France 247 days ago

Until recently Colombia was one of the United States' closest trade and security partners in Latin America.
But the country's first leftist president Gustavo Petro, who has crossed swords with his US counterpart Donald Trump, is trying to steer more trade towards China.
China's ambassador to Bogota denied that Beijing was seeking to topple the United States from its pole position in Latin America.
"China is coming to offer our collaboration, not to replace anyone, nor seeking to take someone's place," Zhu Jingyang told AFP on the sidelines of a media briefing.
Earlier this month, Colombia formally joined China's vast Belt and Road (BRI) infrastructure program.
Bogota's accession boosted Beijing's efforts to deepen ties with Latin America, a key battleground in its confrontation with the Trump administration.
It came in the wake of a showdown between Trump and Petro over deportation flights which ended in humiliation for Colombia.
After initially denying entry to US military planes carrying deported Colombians in January, Bogota sent its own planes to bring them home to avoid hefty US tariffs threatened by Trump.
The business community in Latin America's fourth-biggest economy has expressed fears that Petro's rapprochement with China could damage Colombia's trade with the United States.
The State Department's special envoy for Latin America, Mauricio Claver-Carone, warned recently that the United States might start buying flowers and coffee -- two of Colombia's top exports to the United States -- from other Latin American countries instead.
Zhu accused the Trump administration of using "intimidation" and "blackmail" to try keep Colombia in its orbit.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Musk blasts Trump mega-bill, days after White House farewell
Musk blasts Trump mega-bill, days after White House farewell

LeMonde

timean hour ago

  • LeMonde

Musk blasts Trump mega-bill, days after White House farewell

Tensions between allies Elon Musk and Donald Trump erupted Tuesday, June 3, as the world's richest man derided the president's key piece of economic legislation in a startling rupture just days after exiting a controversial job in the White House. Musk was lauded by the Republican leader as he left his advisory role atop Trump's "Department of Government Efficiency" last week, despite criticism over his failure to deliver on promises of a transformative program of spending cuts. "This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination," Musk posted on X as he followed its progress from the sidelines, in by far his most caustic remarks on Trump's agenda. "Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong." It was not Musk's first comments on Trump's so-called "big, beautiful bill," which is set to add $3 trillion to US deficits over a 10-year horizon, despite deep cuts to health and food aid programs. But Musk's previous criticism was more restrained, with the Tesla and SpaceX magnate offering only that it undermined his cost-cutting efforts. On Tuesday, he said the bill, being considered by Congress, would burden "citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt." His post laid bare an increasingly tense relationship between the White House and Musk, who donated almost $300 million to Trump's 2024 election campaign. Yet the normally pugilistic Republican has pulled his punches, aware of his biggest backer's enormous influence over young, tech-savvy and historically apathetic voters – a key Trump constituency in 2024. "The president already knows where Elon Musk stood on this bill, it doesn't change his opinion," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters in a rapid response to Musk's tweet. "This is one big, beautiful bill, and he's sticking to it." The spat came with House Republicans gearing up to pass legislation due from the White House later Tuesday that proposes to enshrine into law $9.4 billion of DOGE's cuts. House Speaker Mike Johnson called Musk's comments "disappointing," adding that he had talked his "good friend" through the bill during a 20-minute phone call on Monday, and that he "seemed to understand." 'Incredible service' As the world's richest person bowed out of his role as Trump's cost-cutter-in-chief, their relationship appeared on an even keel as the Republican hailed his fellow billionaire's "incredible service." Trump even insisted that Musk was "really not leaving" after a turbulent four months in which the South African-born tycoon cut tens of thousands of jobs, shuttered whole agencies and slashed foreign aid. Help us improve Le Monde in English Dear reader, We'd love to hear your thoughts on Le Monde in English! Take this quick survey to help us improve it for you. Take the survey DOGE – announced after Musk became a regular fixture on the campaign trail for Trump – led an ideologically driven rampage through the federal government, with its young "tech bros" slashing tens of thousands of jobs. But its achievements fell far short of Musk's original boast that he could save $2 trillion, more than the government's entire discretionary spending budget for 2024. The DOGE website claims to have saved taxpayers less than a tenth of that total, just $175 billion, and fact-checkers even see that claim as dubious, given previous serious inaccuracies in its accounting. Senate Democrats released a report Tuesday itemizing 130 examples of "unethical or potentially corrupt" administration actions they say have helped Musk add $100 billion to his wealth during his tenure. The report came as senators began what is expected to be a fraught month of negotiations on Trump's mammoth policy package, expected to add between $2.5 trillion and $3.1 trillion to deficits over a decade. The White House says the legislation will spur robust economic growth to neutralize its potential to blow up America's already burgeoning debt pile, which has ballooned to $36.9 trillion. Trump said on Monday it was "the single biggest Spending Cut in History," although he added: "The only 'cutting' we will do is for Waste, Fraud, and Abuse."

Cuba warns US pressure could trigger migration surge
Cuba warns US pressure could trigger migration surge

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

Cuba warns US pressure could trigger migration surge

President Donald Trump has ramped up pressure since returning to the White House in January, including swiftly reversing an agreement by predecessor Joe Biden that removed Cuba from a list of state sponsors of terrorism. Johana Tablada, deputy general director of the Cuban foreign ministry's US division, said on a visit to Washington that Trump's policies were "deliberately directed to provoke starvation" and to "destabilize Cuba." "It looks really obvious for us that reinforcing the tools to suffocate the Cuban economy will probably trigger the same result as last time, during the first term of Trump. It triggers historic massive migration," she told reporters. Cuba in recent years has seen its biggest wave of emigration since Fidel Castro's 1959 communist revolution, as the island faces economic headwinds and after rare mass protests in 2021. The island has lost around one million inhabitants -- or around a tenth of its population -- since 2012, according to census data. Nearly 700,000 Cubans entered the United States, legally or illegally, between January 2022 and August 2024. Trump has made mass deportations of migrants a key priority. But Tablada said the Trump administration has suspended once-routine migration talks with Cuba. She said that Cuba nonetheless has accepted a plane of citizens deported from the United States each month, continuing an arrangement with the Biden administration. "When I tell you that Cuba is the adult in the room, I am not exaggerating," she said. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American and vociferous critic of Havana, has said that the only item of business worth discussing with Cuba is ending the government. He announced Tuesday that the United States would restrict visas from several Central American government officials, who were not named, for cooperating with Cuba to bring in doctors. "The Cuban labor export program abuses the participants, enriches the corrupt Cuban regime and deprives everyday Cubans of essential medical care that they desperately need in their homeland," he said in a statement. Cuba has sent doctors overseas for years in a key source of soft power -- and revenue. Cuba dispatched 22,632 medical professionals to 57 countries in 2023, with Cuba earning $6.3 billion in 2018 and $3.9 billion in 2020, in part in the form of oil from Venezuela. On a trip in March, Jamaica led Caribbean countries in rejecting Rubio's pressure, saying the Cuban doctors were vital for them and enjoyed rights.

Pelicot mass rape case: French court to hear appeal of only one convicted man
Pelicot mass rape case: French court to hear appeal of only one convicted man

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

Pelicot mass rape case: French court to hear appeal of only one convicted man

A French appeals court will hear the appeal from only one of the 51 men convicted over the mass rape of Gisèle Pelicot orchestrated by her now ex-husband Dominique Pelicot, a judicial source said on Tuesday. Dominique Pelicot was convicted in December 2024 of recruiting strangers over almost a decade to sexually abuse and rape the heavily drugged Gisèle Pelicot, in a case that made her a global feminist icon after she insisted that the trial be held in public. Fifty other men, the strangers who he recruited online to carry out the abuse alongside him, were also convicted in a trial that saw no acquittals. Dominique Pelicot did not appeal his term of 20 years jail for aggravated rape. But seventeen of the other defendants initially lodged an appeal. Sixteen of them have withdrawn their appeals over the last months, said a source close to the case, asking not to be named. The final three such moves to withdraw appeals were made on Tuesday. This means that the appeals trial that gets underway in the southern city of Nimes this autumn will only examine the case of Husamettin D., 44, sentenced to nine years in prison at the trial in December. He will only contest the length of his sentence for rape and not his guilt, the source told AFP. The appeals trial, initially scheduled for October 6 to November 21, should therefore be significantly shorter – if it even takes place. Husamettin D. has the right to withdraw his appeal right up until the opening of the hearing. Dominique Pelicot would likely be called as a witness at the appeals trial. He also faces possible further trials in separate cases after being charged over an attempted rape in 1999 and the rape followed by murder in 1991 in Paris of Sophie Narme, a 23-year-old real estate agent.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store