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La precandidata presidencial habló con El Espectador de sus principales propuestas de cara a las elecciones del 2022. La regulación de las drogas, negociaciones con el Eln y la reforma a la policía fueron los principales temas de conversación.

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00:00What is the need for the war in this country?
00:14We need to stop the war in this country.
00:16We need to stop the war.
00:18We need to stop the war.
00:18We need to re-establish the dialogue with the ELN.
00:22We need to implement the agreements
00:26between the FARC and the state of Colombia.
00:28We need to stop the paramilitarism.
00:31We need to reform the military forces and police forces.
00:37We also need to legalize drugs.
00:40We know that the drug trafficking in this country
00:44is the gasoline that gets to the war so that it will be hard.
00:50And the hunger.
00:52I believe that this country will not have peace
00:55if we don't have the hunger,
00:58the inequity and inequality in which the Colombian people live.
01:06The first thing is that we need to do a pedagogical process.
01:10We need to do a pedagogical process.
01:12We need to do a pedagogical process.
01:14We need to do a sexual life and reproductive life.
01:17In second, we need to do a institutional adequacy.
01:21In terms of treating the health care
01:22for the health centers, the IPS,
01:26to serve as women who seek to have an abortion.
01:30taking into account the weeks that the Constitutional Court establishes, 24 weeks.
01:41Well, I think there is an example of this eutanasia process,
01:46of allowing people who already feel that they don't have conditions,
01:51that they have terminal illnesses, that they are suffering too much,
01:55allowing them to have a dignified death.
01:59It happened with a woman who put tutelas, put demand,
02:04until finally she did it,
02:06a partir of a sentence of the Court.
02:08I think there is a need to move on to that,
02:12always having in mind,
02:15and I think there is to be very clear
02:18that a process of that doesn't come to legitimize
02:22the murder in this country
02:24and the violence that we know that happens every day.
02:32Legalizing drugs is part of the challenge that this country has.
02:37Of course, it started with the regularization of cannabis,
02:40but we have to legalize it as a way
02:44to avoid the systematic violations of human rights
02:48that we are facing in the territories,
02:51the marginalized communities and racialized communities,
02:55the youth and, well, in general, the women,
02:59that we live strongly with the consequences of the anti-drogacy policy
03:04and, of course, the drug trafficking.
03:11Conscientes of the human dignity for diverse populations,
03:16LGBT and Q+, but also for sexual workers,
03:21they are appealing to, for example, women trans,
03:25for a trans law,
03:27that recognize their rights in an integral way,
03:31their rights to health, their rights to a safe job,
03:34their rights to live in dignity,
03:39their rights to work, their rights to economic rights.
03:47I think that the police, as well as this society,
03:54has been affected by the armed conflict.
03:57years and years of an internal conflict
04:02that made the civil society
04:05as an internal enemy,
04:09as a youth as an internal enemy.
04:12And I think that there is a need to build
04:15the formation of the internal enemy
04:18that lived the military and the police.
04:23And that's why they have to build those rights
04:26that they have to see the machos
04:31and then, to see how machos
04:33they have to act, they have to agred,
04:36they have to use the violence.
04:37More sulan,
04:41eh!
04:42Since that, I think that this is a entity
04:45that is not working on its own interests.
04:48Its work is to neutralize
04:51spaces for mobility and that
04:54that is,
04:55and also to alter the order of public,
04:58but they have to do that to the rights
05:03around the community,
05:03and to do it with the rights of human rights.
05:07and killing the youth who protest and the community in general.
05:18Yes, I think it is necessary.
05:21This country does not hold more violence, more armed conflict.
05:24The armed confrontation for so many years has only left dead in the territories.
05:31And it is good to put the dialogue to solve the armed conflict,
05:35not only with the UN, but with all the armed actors that are still putting life in danger in this
05:41country,
05:42and that are still subject to, above all, the most disadvantaged people,
05:46to a terrible humanitarian crisis.
05:54Yes, I think that yes.
05:55I think that, beyond the political views between governments,
06:05of political ideologies,
06:07both the Colombian people in borders,
06:11as the Venezuelan people,
06:13the people who have been affected by the conflict between Colombia and Venezuela.
06:20No, the president of Colombia or Venezuela are the ones who suffer and suffer
06:26the consequences of a diplomatic conflict.
06:30It is the people who have been there.
06:32The more than 12 million Colombians and Venezuelans
06:35that historically have had a relationship in these countries.
06:41Do met.
06:42Up.
06:49Down.
06:49For those reasons,
06:49Us point to me is Mark.
06:50Do a nice article,
06:50Using A travel trip,
06:50Now pay attention to everybody watch out
06:50This is Eli Billie Eilish.
06:50Just with a unique West Wingête.
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