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Heathrow Airport 'fully operational' after fire shutdown

By - Mar 22,2025 - Last updated at Mar 22,2025

 

LONDON — Heathrow Airport said it was "fully operational" on Saturday but delays and cancellations were expected as Europe's busiest air hub resumed operations after a power station fire caused travel mayhem.

 

The electricity substation blaze knocked out power at the London airport, closing it for most of Friday before some flights began to arrive and take off later in the evening.

 

The shutdown affected thousands of passengers around the world and raised serious questions about the reliability of one of the UK's most critical pieces of infrastructure.

 

"We can confirm that Heathrow is open and fully operational today," an airport spokesperson said on Saturday morning.

 

"Teams across the airport continue to do everything they can to support passengers impacted by yesterday's outage at an off-airport power substation."

 

About 1,350 flights were affected by Friday's closure, according to the Flightradar24 tracking website. Around 120 Heathrow-bound planes were in the air when the closure was announced and had to be diverted.

 

Delays and cancellations were likely on Saturday as airlines scrambled to clear a backlog of flights.

 

"We have hundreds of additional colleagues on hand in our terminals and we have added flights to today's schedule to facilitate an extra 10,000 passengers travelling through the airport," the spokesperson said.

 

"Passengers travelling today should check with their airline for the latest information regarding their flight."

 

British Airways said it expected to operate around 85 per cent  of its scheduled flights at the airport throughout the day. The airline would normally run about 600 arrivals and departures on a Saturday.

 

"We are planning to operate as many flights as possible to and from Heathrow on Saturday, but to recover an operation of our size after such a significant incident is extremely complex," a BA spokesperson said.

 

"We expect around 85 per cent  of our Saturday Heathrow schedule to run, but it is likely that all travelling customers will experience delays as we continue to navigate the challenges posed by Friday's power outage at the airport."

 

Restrictions on overnight flights have been temporarily lifted to help ease congestion, according to the UK's transport department.

 

Around 230,000 passengers use Heathrow every day, 83 million a year, making it one of the world's busiest airports. Planes from Heathrow serve around 80 countries.

 

 'No indication of foul play' 

 

The scale of the disruption raised questions about Heathrow's vulnerability.

 

Heathrow Airport's chief executive Thomas Woldbye told the BBC he was "proud" of the airport's response and refused comment when asked if he should step down.

 

Woldbye said on Friday a back-up transformer had failed, meaning systems had to be closed down.

 

He apologised to stranded passengers and defended the airport's response to the situation, saying it was like losing power "equal to that of a mid-sized city".

 

"We cannot guard ourselves 100 per cent," he added.

 

UK Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said the government would "need to understand what caused an incident of this magnitude at an electricity substation that is very close to a critical piece of national infrastructure".

 

London's Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command is leading the investigation into the fire given its impact, but said that there was "currently no indication of foul play".

 

Fire officials said the fire, which broke out on Thursday night, was "believed to be non-suspicious" and that an investigation would "focus on the electrical distribution equipment".

 

Around 150 people were evacuated from nearby properties and the outage left 100,000 homes without power for several hours.

 

Smoke could still be seen coming from the electrical substation on Saturday morning.

Germany approves 3 billion euros in new Ukraine military aid

By - Mar 22,2025 - Last updated at Mar 22,2025

Germany on Friday approved three billion euros in new military aid for Ukraine, just days before planned US-brokered talks with Moscow and Kyiv on a limited truce (AFP photo)

 

BERLIN — Germany on Friday approved three billion euros in new military aid for Ukraine, just days before planned US-brokered talks with Moscow and Kyiv on a limited truce.

 

The money is earmarked for defence equipment for the country fighting Russian forces, including artillery munitions and air defence systems, government officials have said.

 

The three billion euros now released, after months of delay, come on top of four billion euros in Ukraine military aid already planned in the budget for 2025.

 

A further 8.3 billion euros were earmarked for Kyiv for 2026 to 2029 by a parliamentary budget committee, although this may be topped up with more spending from a major new fiscal package that passed a final hurdle Friday.

 

Government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit said the latest package would include units of the German-made Iris-T air defence systems that had yet to be built and would be delivered over the next two years. 

 

Germany has been Ukraine's second-largest supplier of military aid, worth some 28 billion euros so far, after the United States since Russia launched its full-scale invasion over three years ago.

 

But the situation has changed dramatically since US President Donald Trump has reached out to Russia's Vladimir Putin to end the war and frozen military aid for Ukraine, while casting doubt on the future strength of NATO ties.

 

Russia and Ukraine on Friday traded accusations of massive overnight attacks, three days before both sides will hold talks with US officials in Saudi Arabia on how to halt the war.

 

Both countries have said they agree with a 30-day pause in strikes on energy targets, though they have continued their aerial attacks unabated and each has repeatedly accused the other of breaking the truce, which has not been formally agreed.

 

Germany's chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz has pushed through a spending "bazooka" worth hundreds of billions that also loosens Germany's so-called debt brake to bolster its own armed forces and keep backing Ukraine.

 

Merz's conservatives are in coalition talks with the SPD of outgoing Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who has also vowed that Germany would keep supporting Kyiv.

 

Ukraine "can rely on us and we will never leave it on its own," Scholz said at a European Council summit late Thursday. 

 

"It will also need a strong army in times of peace, and it must not be put in danger by any peace agreement."

 

The three-billion-euro package had been held up for months after Scholz's three-way coalition imploded last November amid bitter infighting, mostly on fiscal questions.

 

Earlier Friday, Germany's upper house of parliament gave the final approval to easing Germany's fiscal straightjacket for defence spending and for a 500-billion-euro infrastructure fund.

World's glacier mass shrank again in 2024, UN says

By - Mar 22,2025 - Last updated at Mar 22,2025

Volunteers collect wastes on the Mer de Glace's glacier in Chamonix-Mont Blanc, French Alps, on September 2, 2016, during the annual clean-up operation following the summer season (AFP photo)

GENEVA — All 19 of the world's glacier regions experienced a net loss of mass in 2024 for the third consecutive year, the United Nations said Friday, warning that saving the planet's glaciers was now a matter of "survival".

 

Five of the last six years have seen the most rapid glacier retreat on record, the UN's World Meteorological Organisation said on the inaugural World Day for Glaciers.

 

"Preservation of glaciers is a not just an environmental, economic and societal necessity: it's a matter of survival," said WMO chief Celeste Saulo.

 

Beyond the continental ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica, more than 275,000 glaciers worldwide cover approximately 700,000 square kilometres, the WMO said.

 

But they are rapidly shrinking due to climate change.

 

"The 2024 hydrological year marked the third year in a row in which all 19 glacier regions experienced a net mass loss," the WMO said.

 

Together, they lost 450 billion tonnes of mass, the agency said, citing new data from the Swiss-based World Glacier Monitoring Service [WGMS].

 

It was the fourth-worst year on record, with the worst being in 2023.

 

Huge loss over 50 years 

 

"From 2022-2024, we saw the largest three-year loss of glaciers on record," Saulo said.

 

Glacier mass loss last year was relatively moderate in regions such as the Canadian Arctic and the peripheral glaciers of Greenland, but glaciers in Scandinavia, Norway's Svalbard archipelago and North Asia experienced their worst year on record.

 

Based on a compilation of worldwide observations, the WGMS estimates that glaciers, separate from the continental ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, have lost more than 9,000 billion tonnes since records began in 1975.

 

"This is equivalent to a huge ice block of the size of Germany with a thickness of 25 metres," said WGMS director Michael Zemp.

 

At current rates of melting, many glaciers in western Canada and the United States, Scandinavia, central Europe, the Caucasus and New Zealand "will not survive the 21st century", the WMO said.

 

The agency said that together with ice sheets, glaciers store around 70 per cent  of the world's freshwater resources, with high mountain regions acting like the world's water towers. If they disappear, that would threaten water supplies for millions of people downstream.

 

'Ignoring the problem' 

 

For the UN, the only possible response is to combat global warming by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

 

"We can negotiate many things in the end, but we cannot negotiate physical laws like the melting point of ice," said Stefan Uhlenbrook, the WMO's water and cryosphere director.

 

He declined to comment on the return to office of US President Donald Trump, a climate change sceptic who has pulled the United States out of the landmark 2015 Paris climate accords.

 

However, Uhlenbrook said that "ignoring the problem" of climate change "is maybe convenient for a short period of time", but "that will not help us to get closer to a solution".

 

For the inaugural World Day for Glaciers, the WGMS named a US glacier as its first Glacier of the Year.

 

The South Cascade Glacier in Washington state has been monitored continuously since the 1950s and provides one of the longest uninterrupted records of glaciological mass balance in the western hemisphere.

 

The US Geological Survey, the government body that studies the natural environment, has measurements there going back to 1958, while WGMS's records there began even earlier, in 1952.

 

Kremlin accuses Europe of planning 'militarisation'

By - Mar 20,2025 - Last updated at Mar 20,2025

MOSCOW — The Kremlin on Thursday accused European countries of planning to "militarise" rather than seek peace, as Western military chiefs gathered in Britain to discuss how to protect Ukraine.


Major European powers including France and the UK have sought to boost military spending since Donald Trump took office in January, amid fears the US is no longer committed to European defence.

As Trump builds closer ties with the Kremlin, Russia has shifted much of its anger over the three-year Ukraine conflict towards Europe, accusing the EU and UK of being the main obstacles to peace.

"For the most part, the signals from Brussels and European capitals concern plans to militarise Europe," spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters including AFP.

"Europe has embarked on a militarisation of itself and has turned into somewhat of a war party."

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, co-leader of efforts to form the so-called "coalition of the willing" alongside French President Emmanuel Macron, is expected to address a meeting of roughly 30 military officials later.

Both Starmer and Macron have said they are willing to deploy peacekeepers in Ukraine following a ceasefire between Moscow and Kyiv, an idea Russia has vehemently rejected.

Macron has also said he would open a discussion on extending France's nuclear umbrella to the entire EU.

Russia's Sergei Shoigu, secretary of the Security Council, said Thursday such statements "reflect the anti-Russian sentiment that reigns in Europe today".

Moscow also took aim at Berlin after chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz proposed a huge spending boost on defence and said Moscow was waging a "war of aggression against Europe".

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the comments were a reflection of the "German political elites' desire for historical revenge", adding that Russia had no plans to attack, and "if Germany makes such statements, it means Germany has the plans."

 

European leaders and military brass meet over Ukraine peace plans

By - Mar 20,2025 - Last updated at Mar 20,2025

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz discuss during a European Union Summit at the Europa Building Forum, in Brussels on Thursday (AFP photo)

LONDON — Senior military figures and European leaders gathered Thursday to thrash out plans for long-term peace in Ukraine, as the United States and Russia prepared for fresh talks on ending the war.


Around 30 military leaders from countries keen to help police any lasting ceasefire in Ukraine were to meet north of London, while on the other side of the Channel, EU leaders headed to Brussels.

The flurry of European activity comes with lingering concern about the United States' commitment to backing security on the continent, and fears of future Russian aggression against Baltic and Nordic countries.

Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky and Russia's Vladimir Putin both held talks with their US counterpart Donald Trump this week, and have indicated they are prepared to halt attacks on energy infrastructure for 30 days.

But there has since been no let-up in strikes in the grinding three-year war, and both countries reported a barrage of new drone strikes overnight, as questions remained about the exact details of any lasting peace deal.

Trump, who has spooked European and NATO allies by his overtures to Putin and lukewarm commitment to European security, suggested on Wednesday night the United States could take over and run Ukraine's power plants.

Putin, for his part, has made an end to further Western military support for Ukraine a red line for Russia agreeing to a long-term truce.

Zelensky, who is on a visit to Norway and is due to address EU leaders in Brussels, has said that will make Ukraine vulnerable to further attack and warned against making concessions that would embolden Moscow.

 Air defences

In the UK, Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to address the closed-door meeting of military leaders at the Permanent Joint Headquarters north of London.

Starmer has spearheaded efforts with French President Emmanuel Macron to form a so-called "coalition of the willing" to police any truce in Ukraine, and both say they are willing to put their own troops on the ground.

Russia has said it will not accept the presence of any NATO troops foreign soldiers in Ukraine but Washington has not yet indicated whether it would be willing to provide a security backstop.

Despite Trump going cold on support for Ukraine, the United States is looking at acquiring additional air defence systems for Kyiv to counter Russia's ballistic missiles.

"This is extremely important," said the EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas, who is pushing member states to meet a Ukrainian request for two million shells worth five billion euros .

According to a White House readout, Zelensky on Wednesday asked Trump for help in obtaining US-made "Patriot missile systems" to bolster its current stock provided by the United States, Germany and Romania.

At the Kremlin, spokesman Dmitry Peskov questioned whether Europe, where governments are looking at steep increases in domestic defence spending, was committed to ending the fighting.

"For the most part, the signals from Brussels and European capitals concern plans to militarise Europe," he said.

 Talks

UK armed forces minister Luke Pollard said Washington and Kyiv were "closer than ever" despite Zelensky's public dressing down in the Oval Office last month and concerns about Trump's intentions for Ukraine.

"Now the ball is really in Russia's court here. They're the ones that aren't seeking an immediate ceasefire," he told Sky News.

Peskov said the next talks between Russia and the United States could take place on Sunday or early next week, as Washington is also due to hold talks with Kyiv in Saudi Arabia in the coming days.

In the meantime, attacks continue by both sides.

Ukraine's air force said Thursday that Russia launched 171 drones over its territory overnight, with two people were killed in the northeastern Sumy and Kharkiv regions and several others wounded.

A drone attack in the town of Kropyvnytsky, far from the front line, wounded 10, including four children.

"With each such launch, the Russians expose to the world their true attitude towards peace," Zelensky wrote on social media.

Russia meanwhile said its air defence units had shot down 132 Ukrainian drones in several regions across the country.

Two people were wounded in the southwestern city of Engels and schools and a hospital were damaged, it added.

M23 fighters seize key DR Congo town despite ceasefire bid

By - Mar 20,2025 - Last updated at Mar 20,2025

M23 rebels in DR Congo (AFP photo)

GOMA — The Rwanda-backed M23 armed group has taken control of the mining hub of Walikale in DR Congo, local sources said Thursday, despite attempts to broker a ceasefire this week.


The seizure of the town of around 60,000 people late on Wednesday marks the farthest west the anti-government group has advanced into the interior of the Democratic Republic of Congo since it emerged in 2012.

It comes just after Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi and his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame held surprise talks in Doha on Tuesday, expressing their support for a ceasefire.

But the terms of any truce remain unclear, with mediator Qatar saying further negotiations were necessary.

"Walikale-centre is occupied by the M23... We retreated to avoid human losses," an officer in the DRC's military (FARDC) told AFP, saying its forces were now around 30 kilometres (20 miles) away in Mubi.

A separate security source confirmed the capture and also said fighting took place in Mubi on Thursday.

The offensive had already caused mining group, Alphamin, this month to evacuate its employees and halt operations at the world's third most productive tin mine.

The Bisie site produces the tin ore cassiterite and is located in the Walikale district of North Kivu province.

The halt in mining drove up prices of tin, while concerns rise over the supply chain of the valuable metal used to solder electronic components onto printed circuit boards.

The boom in the electronics and renewable energy sectors is fuelling growing demand, according to analysts.

The region also has several gold mines.

The M23 fighters "are in the neighbourhoods of Walikale", Fiston Misona, a civil society representative from the community, said early Thursday.

Another resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they saw groups of armed fighters "through the windows" of their house.

A Doctors without Borders [MSF] base was "caught in the crossfire" during the fighting but no injuries were reported, local official Marco Doneda said.

"The MSF team is concerned about the influx of those wounded in the coming days and hours," he said.

Ceasefire bid

The M23 has waged a lightning push over the last few months in the mineral-rich eastern DRC, driving the Congolese army out of much of North and South Kivu provinces and raising fears of a wider regional war.

The DRC government has accused Rwanda of backing the M23 in order to seize valuable mineral resources.

Rwanda denies providing the M23 with military support, but a UN experts' report has said that Rwanda maintains around 4,000 troops in the DRC's east to assist the armed group.

On Tuesday, Kagame and Tshisekedi met in Doha for talks mediated by Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani.

The two African heads of state, whose previous attempts at talks collapsed at the last minute,  expressed their support for "an immediate and unconditional ceasefire", a statement from the three countries said.

No details have emerged on the terms of how the ceasefire will be implemented, as it would also have to involve the M23 on the ground to succeed.

The meeting between the two heads of state came after peace talks between Kinshasa and the M23, due to have been held in the Angolan capital Luanda on Tuesday, were cancelled.

The last time the Congolese government and the M23 held talks was in 2013.

Armenia urges Azerbaijan to sign peace deal after talks conclude

By - Mar 20,2025 - Last updated at Mar 20,2025

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday called on Azerbaijan to begin consultations on signing a peace treaty, a text of which the arch-foe Caucasus neighbours agreed upon last week (AFP photo)

YEREVAN — Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday called on Azerbaijan to begin consultations on signing a peace treaty, a text of which the arch-foe Caucasus neighbours agreed upon last week.


Baku and Yerevan fought two wars for control of Azerbaijan's Armenian-populated region of Karabakh, at the end of the Soviet Union and again in 2020, before Azerbaijan seized the entire area in a 24-hour offensive in September 2023.

Both countries have repeatedly said a comprehensive peace deal to end their long-standing conflict is within reach, but previous talks had failed to reach consensus on a draft agreement.

On Friday, the two countries said they had wrapped up talks on resolving the conflict, with both sides agreeing on the text of a possible treaty.

"The draft of Armenia-Azerbaijan peace agreement has been agreed upon and awaits signing," Pashinyan said Thursday in an English post on Telegram.

"I propose Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to begin joint consultations on the signing of the agreed draft peace agreement."

The deal to normalise ties would be a major breakthrough in a region where Russia, the European Union, the United States and Turkey all jostle for influence.

Baku has made clear its expectations that Armenia remove from its constitution a reference to its 1991 declaration of independence, which asserts territorial claims over Karabakh.

Any constitutional amendment would require a national referendum that could further delay the treaty's finalisation.

Pashinyan has recognised Baku's sovereignty over Karabakh after three decades of Armenian separatist rule, a move seen as a crucial first step towards a normalisation of relations.

Armenia also last year returned to Azerbaijan four border villages it had seized decades earlier.

Nearly all ethnic Armenians, more than 100,000 people, fled Karabakh after its takeover by Baku.

Washington, Brussels and European leaders such as France's President Emmanuel Macron have welcomed the breakthrough. They have all tried to play a mediating role at various times in the conflict.

US Fed holds rates again and flags increased economic uncertainty

By - Mar 19,2025 - Last updated at Mar 19,2025

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell delivers remarks at a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting at the Federal Reserve on March 19, 2025 in Washington, DC

WASHINGTON — The US Federal Reserve paused interest rate cuts again on Wednesday and noted an increase in economic uncertainty, as it navigates an economy unnerved by President Donald Trump's stop-start tariff rollout.
 
Policymakers voted to hold the US central bank's key lending rate at between 4.25 per cent and 4.50 per cent, the Fed announced in a statement.
 
They also cut their growth forecast for 2025 and hiked their inflation outlook, while still penciling in two rate cuts this year -- in line with their previous forecast in December.
 
The Fed's vote was not unanimous, with one governor rebelling in opposition to his colleagues' decision to slow the pace at which the Fed shrinks the size of its balance sheet.
 
Since taking office in January, Trump has ramped up levies on top trading partners including China, Canada and Mexico -- only to roll some of them back -- and threatened to impose reciprocal tariffs on other countries.
 
Many analysts fear Trump's economic policies could push up inflation and hamper economic growth, and complicate the Fed's plans to bring inflation down to its long-term target of two percent while maintaining a healthy labor market.
 
"It's quite unclear how high the tariffs will get, how widespread they will be, and how long they will last," former Boston Fed president Eric Rosengren told AFP ahead of the rate decision. "And it's very hard to estimate what the impact on inflation or unemployment is going to be until they get a little more visibility into that."
Slowing economy -
 
Until recently, the hard economic data had pointed to a fairly robust American economy, with the Fed's favored inflation measure showing a 2.5 per cent rise in the year to January -- above target but down sharply from a four-decade high in 2022.
 
Economic growth was relatively robust through the end of 2024, while the labor market has remained fairly strong, with healthy levels of job creation, and an unemployment rate hovering close to historic lows.
 
But the mood has shifted in the weeks since Trump returned to the White House, with inflation expectations rising and financial markets tumbling amid the on-again, off-again rollout of tariffs.
 
Against that backdrop, Fed policymakers tweaked their economic forecasts. While they still have two rate cuts penciled in this year and next, they have revised other data points.
 
They now expect economic growth to increase by 1.7 percent this year, and by 1.8 percent next year -- a sharp decline from the last economic outlook in December.
 
They also raised their outlook for inflation in 2025 and 2026, and nudged up their forecast for the unemployment rate.
 
'Disaster' 
 
While Fed officials have sought to avoid criticizing the new administration, some analysts have been less restrained.
 
"US President Donald Trump's management of economic policy has been a disaster," Michael Strain, the director of economic policy studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, wrote in a recent blog post.
 
"Fed officials want to be careful not to overreact," Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic told AFP ahead of the rate decision, adding she expects the Fed to ultimately make just one rate cut this year.
 
"There's so much uncertainty," she said, adding that she hoped to have more clarity on the US economy after the planned rollout of Trump's retaliatory tariffs on April 2.
 
Fed chair Jerome Powell will address reporters later Wednesday, and is expected to face questions about how the Fed will chart a path through the ongoing turbulence caused by the rollout of Trump's economic policies.

Ukraine ceasefire talks planned Sunday in Jeddah — US

By - Mar 19,2025 - Last updated at Mar 19,2025

Members of the 24th Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Military rest around a fire after a field training exercise in an undisclosed location in the eastern region of Ukraine, on March 18, 2025 (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — Talks on a ceasefire in Russia's war with Ukraine will continue on Sunday in the Saudi Arabian city of Jeddah, US President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff said Tuesday.
 
In an interview with Fox News hours after Trump held a lengthy phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Witkoff said talks on a ceasefire deal "will begin on Sunday in Jeddah."
 
Witkoff said the US delegation in Saudi Arabia would be led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, but did not indicate who they would be holding talks with.
 
Referring to a ceasefire on energy infrastructure and targets in the Black Sea, Witkoff said: "I think both of those are now agreed to by the Russians. I am certainly hopeful that the Ukrainians will agree to it."
 
Ukraine on Wednesday accused Russia of effectively rejecting the US-backed ceasefire proposal, reporting a barrage of strikes on civilian infrastructure hours after Moscow agreed only to pause attacks on the energy grid.
 
Washington has been pushing for a full, 30-day ceasefire as a first step towards a wider settlement of the grinding three-year-old war. 
 
In a 90-minute call with Trump on Tuesday, Russian President Putin refused, insisting that any such deal would be contingent on Ukraine's allies halting all military aid.
 
According to the Kremlin, Putin has already ordered his military to pause strikes against Ukrainian energy targets for 30 days.
 
Witkoff, however, reiterated that the proposed ceasefire included "energy and infrastructure in general."
 
Trump's envoy commended Russian President Putin "for all he did today on that call to move his country close to a final peace deal."
 
Witkoff said that with consensus around energy and infrastructure targets as well as those in the Black Sea, he believed "it's a relatively short distance to a full ceasefire from there."

Thousands march in support of Colombia's president, reforms

By - Mar 19,2025 - Last updated at Mar 19,2025

Colombia's President Gustavo Petro speaks during a rally in Bogota yesterday , to pressure Congress to approve the government reforms (AFP photo)

BOGOTÁ — Colombia's leftist president called thousands of supporters to the streets Tuesday, a political show of strength in an effort to press lawmakers into passing stalled health and labour reforms.


In major cities from Bogota to Medellin, thousands of Gustavo Petro's supporters blocked streets, waved flags and chanted slogans of support.

Petro, 64, is the first leftist president in Colombia's history, but has failed to pass the bulk of his reformist agenda through Congress.

With little more than a year left in his four-year term, Petro is now in a race to fulfil key pledges and cement his political legacy.

The ex-guerrilla cannot run in the 2026 elections, but he hopes populist support in favour of his reforms will bolster goodwill for his as-yet unannounced successor.

Petro has blamed powerful business interests for blocking reforms, which among other measures would give workers extra pay for working nights, Sundays or public holidays.

He joined the march in Bogota's Plaza de Bolivar, telling protesters that a corrupt "oligarchy" has "betrayed the Colombian people, for greed and for money."

"Colombia's Congress is turning its back on the people," he said, demanding a referendum on the reforms -- a vote unlikely to pass Congress.

Pensioner Edgar Sanchez said he was protesting so that his children and grandchildren can regain what he once had: "eight-hour workdays, night pay and an end to outsourcing."

Maritza Rodríguez, a 48-year-old teacher in Bogota, complained of mistreatment by employers.

"Workers should have the opportunity to change their lifestyle... we would be happier. The economic situation would recover," she said.

Petro's approval rating stands at 32 percent, according to the latest poll by Invamer.

His disapproval rate has soared to 63 percent, thanks in part to perceived failures in countering narcotrafficking, armed guerrilla groups and corruption.

Petro is also facing a cabinet crisis after calling last month for the resignations of senior officials, who he accused of falling behind on the delivery of key projects.

The latest was Finance Minister Diego Guevara, who on Tuesday announced on social media platform X that he had submitted his resignation after a "personal, calm, and friendly conversation" with the president. 

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