Colombian President Gustavo Petro speaking at a podium.
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THE President of the world’s cocaine capital Colombia said the drug was “no worse than whiskey” amid a fiery feud with Donald Trump.

President Gustavo Petro called for the killer powder to be legalised just days after Trump embarrassed the leader by forcing the South American chief to cave and accept his deportee planes.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro speaking at a podium.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro said cocaine was ‘no worse than whiskey’Credit: AFP
Colombian police escorting an arrested man at night during an anti-drug operation.

Colombian police escort an arrested man during an operation against criminal gangs and drug traffickers (pictured in 2020)Credit: AFP
Police escorting handcuffed suspects to extradition.

Alleged members of Colombian drug trafficking gangs being escorted by police officers and Interpol agents before their extradition to the USCredit: AFP

Petro made the shocking claim during a six-hour ministerial meeting where he claimed the drug is only illegal because of its origins.

He said: “Cocaine is illegal because it is made in Latin America, not because it is worse than whiskey.

“Scientists have analyzed this. Cocaine is no worse than whiskey.”

Colombia – the world’s biggest producer and exporter of cocaine – has spent years attempting to curb its drug issue but the President claimed the illegal powder was being scapegoated by US politicians.

Petro claimed America faced a bigger issue with fentanyl and alleged Cocaine was not a major problem.

During the meeting the President said fentanyl “is killing Americans and it is not made in Colombia”.

He added that “Fentanyl was created as a pharmacy drug by North American multinationals” and the people who used it “became addicted”.

Cocaine is a deadly and illegal drug responsible for over 27,000 US deaths in 2022, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

The highly addictive drug holds serious medical dangers, such as increasing the risk of a heart attack and damaging the nervous system, as well as heavy jail time.

The average prison sentence in the US, where most Colombian cocaine is sent, for possession is on average five years behind bars, according to the United States Sentencing Commission.

Trump’s row with Colombia is a warning to all leaders

The Colombian President’s bizarre comments are set to raise eyebrows in Washington as they came just days after Petro and Trump narrowly avoided an immigration and trade war.

America’s Commander-in-chief started off his second term with a bang when he sent two military aircraft filled with around 200 deportees to Colombia.

Petro initially refused to accept these flights but he quickly caved after Trump mounted economic pressure on January 26.

The US President threatened to impose an eye-watering 25 per cent tariff on Colombian imports and immediate visa revocation for government officials in the US.

Petro even offered his presidential plane to “facilitate the dignified return of the compatriots who were to arrive in the country this morning from deportation flights”.

Bogotá soon sent two military aircraft on Monday equipped with medical staff on board to fetch its nationals in the cities of San Diego and Houston.

Just a week after this bold move, Petro’s bizarre cocaine rant even saw him suggest the drug should become legal.

He said: “If you want peace, you have to dismantle the business (of drug trafficking).

Dangers of cocaine

THE illegal drug is banned in the US and carries heaving jail sentences for possession, selling, and trafficking.

Here are some of the dangers of this addictive and deadly drug:

  • Loss of sense of smell, nosebleeds, and problems with swallowing.
  • Organ damage.
  • An increased risk of stroke and seizures.
  • Bleeding within the brain.
  • Impaired cognitive functions.
  • Increased risk of panic attacks, paranoia, and psychosis.

Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse

“It could easily be dismantled if they legalize cocaine in the world. It would be sold like wine.”

Trump has threatened huge sanctions on nations he believed were fuelling a drug trafficking epidemic into the US.

The US President placed 10 per cent tariffs on China as a response for the apparent flow of fentanyl from the Asian country to the US.

Trump also intimidated Canada and Mexico with 25 per cent tariffs as retaliation for illegal migration and alleged fentanyl trafficking.

This deadly drug is responsible for 75,000 deaths per year, according to The White House.

Colombians deported from the United States arrive at an airport.

Colombians deported from the United States arrive in BogotaCredit: Reuters
Migrants disembarking a Colombian Air Force plane after deportation from the US.

Migrants disembarking a Colombian Air Force plane after being deported from the US in Bogota on January 28Credit: AFP
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