Op-Ed / Latin America & Caribbean 17 June 2022 1 minute Colombia Is Slipping Back Toward Violence. The Next President Can Stop That. Share Facebook Twitter Email Linkedin Whatsapp Save Print Also available in Español Español English Last month a criminal armed group shut down much of the northern third of Colombia — largely uncontested. “We decree four days of Armed Strike from this moment,” read the May 5 pamphlet ordering the population to stay indoors, the shops to close and the roads to be empty. The Gulf Clan, a paramilitary-style drug trafficking group, initiated the strike against the Colombian government in retaliation for the capture and extradition of its leader, Dairo Antonio Úsuga, known as Otoniel, to the United States. “We are not responsible for what happens to those who do not comply,” the group warned ominously. The full article can be read on the New York Times' website. Related Tags More for you Q&A / Latin America & Caribbean Colombia’s Election Clash Rattles a Fragile Peace Also available in Also available in Español Op-Ed / Latin America & Caribbean How to Talk to Colombia’s Largest Criminal Group Originally published in The New York Times