Uribe refutes Petro's higher education figures shared with Westcol

Former President Álvaro Uribe Vélez challenged President Gustavo Petro's claims on higher education progress, stated in an interview with content creator Westcol. Uribe shared contrasting data on enrollment and subsidies via X. Petro replied with a graph showing increased investment.

Former President Álvaro Uribe Vélez publicly criticized Gustavo Petro's statements in a recent interview with content creator Westcol. Petro claimed that “400,000 new young people are in universities, studying for free.” Uribe called this a “lie” and posted a comparative chart with official figures.

Uribe stated that real new entries into public higher education total 190,000 students, far short of the 500,000 slots in the National Development Plan. He noted new spaces across technical, technological, and university levels at just 57,930. On gratuidad, he highlighted a net increase of 203,000 beneficiaries, from 727,000 at the end of Iván Duque's term to 930,000 now.

On infrastructure, Uribe disputed the promise of 100 new universities, saying it amounted to 42 physical improvement projects, with only eight completed. For Icetex, he said announced debt condonations have not materialized, with subsidies cut 74% and new credits dropping over 80% from 2024 to 2025.

Petro replied on social media with a graph showing $7.49 trillion in higher education investment, compared to $0.72 trillion under the previous government.

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Illustration depicting Colombian President Gustavo Petro denying US drug trafficking investigation links, with symbolic elements and New York Times headline overlay.
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US investigations mention Petro in drug trafficking probes

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Two US federal prosecutors are investigating possible links between Colombian President Gustavo Petro and drug traffickers, according to a March 20, 2026, New York Times report. Petro denied the claims, stating no such probe exists against him in Colombia. Colombia's US embassy urged caution regarding reports based on anonymous sources.

President Gustavo Petro met with content creator Westcol at the Casa de Nariño on March 27 in a live stream lasting over an hour that drew more than one million viewers. They discussed security, youth opportunities and education, highlighting differences on a 'tough hand' against crime. Petro stressed education as the true easy path for young people.

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President Gustavo Petro posted on X that extreme poverty measures his administration's success and that it has lifted nearly four million Colombians out of it.

President Gustavo Petro stated that the strong revaluation of the Colombian peso, with the dollar at $3,578 on Tuesday, stems from the Banco de la República's interest rate hike. He noted it cheapens external debt and imports but raises export costs. Petro warned it could undermine poverty reduction efforts.

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In the televised Council of Ministers, President Gustavo Petro Urrego stated that there is no chaos in Colombia's health system, citing a continuous reduction in under-5 child mortality rates during his administration. Health Minister Guillermo Alfonso Jaramillo presented figures showing a drop in malnutrition deaths, from 404 cases in 2022 to 160 in 2025.

President Gustavo Petro announced that Colombia lost nearly 18 billion dollars between 2020 and 2026 from unregistered gold exports. He stated that these activities finance illegal armed groups and proposed reforms making the Banco de la República the buyer of gold from small-scale mining.

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Elected representative Santiago Castro accused President Gustavo Petro of lifting arrest warrants against Clan del Golfo leaders to boost Iván Cepeda's campaign in the May 31 presidential elections.

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