Overview Logo
Article Main Image

President Gustavo Petro called the founders of Bogotá and Santa Marta "genocidal" at a public event: "We can't celebrate."

El Tiempo

Colombia

Wednesday, July 30


Alternative Takes

The World's Current Take


Colombian President Gustavo Petro on Tuesday called Spanish conquistadors like Rodrigo de Bastidas, who founded the city of Santa Marta 500 years ago, genocidal, and stated that this event cannot be celebrated as a heroic feat, but rather as the beginning of the massacres.

We cannot celebrate the genocidaires who brought blood, said the president during an official ceremony at the Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino in Santa Marta, where he led the commemoration of the 500 years of the oldest city in the country.

The president insisted that the Spanish conquistadors Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, founder of Bogotá, and Rodrigo de Bastidas, founder of Santa Marta, did not found civilizations, they initiated massacres.

Presidente Gustavo Petro.
President Gustavo Petro. Photo:EFE

Petro was welcomed to the event by indigenous authorities, accompanied by his chief of staff, Alfredo Saade, and several ministers.

In his speech, he compared the Spanish conquest to contemporary tragedies, such as the war in the Middle East, and asserted that America was so named at the cost of the genocide of millions of people, whether by the sword or by the diseases they brought.

Petro criticizes the glorification of the conquest

Santa Marta, founded on July 29, 1525 by Bastidas, celebrated five centuries since its founding this Tuesday, following a week filled with cultural events, institutional visits, and a beach serenade hosted by Carlos Vives, one of the most celebrated artists born in this Caribbean city.

On July 20, Petro presided over a military parade in that city to commemorate Colombia's independence from the Spanish, something he also criticized because they placed him under the statue of Bastidas, although that day does not commemorate Bastidas, it commemorates the opposite.

Presidente Gustavo Petro.
President Gustavo Petro. Photo:EFE

What we celebrate today is the resilience of the people who survived and escaped to the Sierra. They are our true founders, he said.

The event took place at the emblematic Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino, a site full of historical symbolism as it is the place where the Liberator Simón Bolívar died in 1830.

In remembering Bolívar, the president contrasted his emancipatory legacy with the founding trauma left by the conquest.

During the event, the government launched the Santa Marta 500 Years newsletter, with announcements for the region, such as the construction of a train to the municipality of La Dorada, investments in water justice and energy transition, and the protection of the Sierra Nevada as a natural and historical heritage site for the country.

Presidente Gustavo Petro.
President Gustavo Petro. Photo:EFE

We are older than the Egyptians and the Romans. There are traces in this land that are more than 20,000 years old, Petro said, calling for the eradication of the word"conquest" from the language when referring to war.

Follow all the Politics information on X, or in our weekly newsletter.

Get the full experience in the app

Scroll the Globe, Pick a Country, See their News

International stories that aren't found anywhere else.

Global News, Local Perspective

50 countries, 150 news sites, 500 articles a day.

Don’t Miss what Gets Missed

Explore international stories overlooked by American media.

Unfiltered, Uncensored, Unbiased

Articles are translated to English so you get a unique view into their world.

Apple App Store Badge