Mexico’s president hosts Colombia’s leader, Gustavo Petro
Migration, regional integration and the importance of βunity between progressive governmentsβ were among the issues Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and Colombian President Gustavo Petro spoke about at a meeting in Mexico City on Monday.
The two leftist leaders met at the National Palace on Monday morning. It was the third time theyβd met in as many months, after Petro traveled to Mexico for Sheinbaumβs inauguration in October and the two presidents participated in the G20 Leadersβ Summit in Brazil last month.
Platicamos con el presidente de Colombia, Gustavo Petro, sobre la importancia de la unidad entre los gobiernos progresistas, asΓ como la uniΓ³n de AmΓ©rica Latina y el Caribe. pic.twitter.com/iMepHXkzkv
β Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo (@Claudiashein) December 16, 2024
This video published by Sheinbaumβs Twitter account Monday, doesnβt show any of the two leadersβ discussion but showed the relative informality of their visit, compared to formal state visits by world leaders.
βWe spoke with the president of Colombia, Gustavo Petro, about the importance of unity between progressive governments, as well as the unity of Latin America and the Caribbean,β Sheinbaum wrote on social media on Monday in a post that included a video clip that demonstrated considerable warmth between the two presidents.
Petroβs office said in a statement that the Colombian presidentβs βofficial visitβ to Mexico was aimed at strengthening βcooperation between both countries on historical, migratory and regional integration issues.β
During their meeting on Monday, the commitment of both Petro and Sheinbaum to βa joint agenda that promotes sustainability, social justice and Latin American integrationβ stood out, the presidentβs office said.
The statement also highlighted that the two presidents reached an agreement to βreactivate the search for the remains of the general JosΓ© MarΓa Melo , the only Indigenous president of Colombia and a key figure in the common history of both countries.β
Melo was killed in Chiapas during Mexicoβs 19th-century Reform War.
Migration and regional integration discussedΒ
Petroβs office said that the Colombian and Mexican governments also agreed to βstrengthen the exchange of information in order to guarantee dignified treatment of Colombians in transit in Mexico.β
The statement said there have been βreports of bad treatmentβ of Colombian nationals in Mexico airports in the past.
Petroβs office said that the two governments also agreed that the issue of migration βmust be addressed with a focus on human rights and regional solidarity.β
Millions of Venezuelans have migrated to Colombia due to the dire situation in their own country, while people from all over the world β especially citizens of certain Latin American countries β travel through Mexico en route to the United States.
The office of the Colombian president said that Petro, president since 2022, and Sheinbaum also βconfirmed their commitmentβ to Latin American integration, βhighlighting the importance of forging strategic alliances in the face of global challenges.β
The meeting between the two presidents in Mexico City βreaffirms the willβ of the Colombian and Mexican governments to βwork for a more united, fair and prosperous continent,β Petroβs office said.
At her morning press conference on Tuesday, Sheinbaum said that βthe progressive governments of Latin Americaβ βββ those she cited included the governments of Chile, Brazil and Guatemala β have βa lot of things in common.β
ββ¦And beyond the affinity of the progressive governments, we believe that unity with Latin America on many issues is very important,β she said.
βIn fact, our vision is that the trade agreement between the United States, Canada and Mexico should be expanded in many senses toward the south, because that would make us, as a continent, an economic power far above any other region of the world,β Sheinbaum said.
βThat is our vision. The [former] president LΓ³pez Obrador spoke about it during his time [in office], I spoke about it when I was sworn in and [more] recently as well. This is the vision we have,β she said.
Sheinbaum also clarified that Petroβs visit to Mexico wasnβt βa state visit.β
βIt was a visit of a president, but it didnβt have all the protocols of a state visit,β she said.
When a reporter suggested that it was a meeting between two friends, Sheinbaum said that it was, in fact, between two presidents.
Petro said on Sept. 30, the day before Sheinbaum was sworn in, that Sheinbaum was a member of M-19 , a Colombian urban guerrilla movement that was active in the 1970s and 1980s. The movement has yielded two presidents of Latin American countries, he said, referring to himself and Sheinbaum.
With reports from El Financiero Β and El EconomistaΒ
Source: Mexico News Daily