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Colombian politician, human rights activist, philosopher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iván Cepeda Castro (born October 24, 1962) is a left-wing Colombian politician, human rights activist, and philosopher.[1] The eldest son of the late left-wing politician Manuel Cepeda Vargas, Cepeda has served as a member of the Senate since 2014 for the Alternative Democratic Pole. He previously served in the Chamber of Representatives from 2010 and 2014.
Iván Cepeda | |
---|---|
Senator of Colombia | |
Assumed office July 20, 2014 | |
Member of the Chamber of Representatives | |
In office July 20, 2010 – July 20, 2014 | |
Constituency | Capital District |
Personal details | |
Born | Iván Cepeda Castro October 24, 1962 Bogotá, D.C., Colombia |
Political party | Alternative Democratic Pole |
Education | Sofia University (B.A.) University of Lyon (M.A.) |
Cepeda is the official spokesperson for the Movement of Victims of State Crimes (MOVICE), an organization born in 2003 to bring together the families of victims of crimes against humanity and organizations that work for human rights.[2]
Born in Bogota, Cepeda is the eldest son of left-wing activists Manuel Cepeda Vargas and Yira Castro. In 1965 at the age of 3, Cepeda and his family were forced into exile due to political repression, and during his early years lived in Prague. Following the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, Cepeda's family would seek refuge in Havana, Cuba. Cepeda's family would later return to Colombia in 1970, but remained a target of political violence. On August 9, 1994, his father was murdered on the streets of Bogota by a paramilitary group.[3][4]
At age 19, Cepeda migrated to Sofia, Bulgaria, where he studied philosophy at Sofia University. Cepeda returned to Colombia in 1987 as a critic of the Soviet model, which he considered authoritarian, and became involved in the presidential campaign of Bernardo Jaramillo Ossa. Jaramillo Ossa would later be assassinated in 1990.[5]
Cepeda would later distance himself from the Colombian Communist Party, a party he was active in during his adolescence, and in 1990 would join the M-19 Alliance party.[6] Following his father's assassination, he created the Manuel Cepeda Foundation together with his wife, Claudia Girón, to identify the perpetrator of crime.
Cepeda would later found the National Movement for Victims, made up of 17 organizations that sought justice for crimes that occurred during the armed conflict in the 1980s and 1990s.[7] This led to increased violent threats against Cepeda, leading him to go into exile in France in 2000. While in France, he received a master's degree in human rights from the University of Lyon.[8] He would later return to Colombia in 2003 to resume his work advocating for victims of state and paramilitary violence in Colombia.
In 2009, Cepeda formally entered the realm of electoral politics, standing for the Chamber of Representatives in the 2010 legislative elections. He received over 35,000 votes and was elected to the body as a member of the socialist Alternative Democratic Pole.
In 2014, Cepeda chose to run for Senate, receiving a total of 84,126 votes and getting elected. Cepeda would be reelected in 2018, winning 77,842 votes that cycle. Cepeda was reelected in 2022.[9]
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