Colombia’s defense minister dies from COVID-19 at age 69

Colombian Defense Minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo, one of the country’s most recognized conservative politicians, has died from complications of COVID-19. He was 69.
President Ivan Duque said in a televised address that Trujillo died
early Tuesday, adding that he “couldn’t express the pain” he was feeling over
the news. He offered his condolences to Trujillo’s wife, children and other
family members.
“His life was a reflection of
vocation for public service,” Duque said.
Trujillo became defense minister in November 2019, after serving as
foreign minister. He was also the mayor of Cali from 1988-1990 and held several
ministerial and diplomatic positions during his decades-long political career.
Trujillo ran for president unsuccessfully in 2018, when he was defeated
by Duque, who was then a rookie senator, in an internal party contest.
As a foreign minister, Trujillo backed U.S. efforts to force Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro out of office by supporting his rival Juan Guaidó. The
campaign to remove Maduro through political and diplomatic pressure floundered,
but has led to tougher U.S. sanctions against Venezuela’s socialist government.
Trujillo also oversaw Colombia’s response to a massive influx of
refugees from neighboring Venezuela, coming up with programs that facilitated
temporary residence for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans.
As defense minister, Trujillo led the country’s efforts to tackle
cocaine production, which had been growing rapidly since 2013 but stabilized
the last two years. Trujillo campaigned for Colombia to resume aerial
fumigation of coca crops, which was suspended in 2015 over environmental and
health concerns. He argued that the Colombian government had found cleaner ways
to fumigate the crops and that manual eradication put military personnel and
contractors in danger.
In a statement, Colombia’s government said that Trujillo fell ill during
a visit to the coastal city of Barranquilla, where he was taken to a hospital
on Jan 11. The defense minister was transferred to a military hospital in
Bogota two days later and was placed in an intensive care unit and spent
several days in an induced coma before dying.
Colombia has recorded more than 50,000 deaths from COVID-19 and more
than 2 million cases. Vaccination still hasn’t begun in Colombia, which has a
population of about 50 million people and is the largest country in Latin
America so far without the life-saving shots.
Duque said that his government has purchased 20 million doses of vaccines from Pfizer and AstraZeneca and has also signed an agreement with the World Health Organization’s Covax platform for an additional 20 million shots. Government officials have said that they hope to start vaccinations in February.