The Jerusalem Post

Colombian Nobel Prize winner sees a ‘ray of hope’ for Syria, Sudan

- • By ALISTER DOYLE

OSLO (Reuters) – Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said an accord to end a 52-year civil war with Marxist rebels is a “ray of hope” for solving conflicts from Syria to South Sudan as he collected the Nobel Peace Prize on Saturday.

In an acceptance speech that quoted an anti-war song by Bob Dylan, the 2016 Literature laureate, Santos said Colombia itself had drawn inspiratio­n from other peace processes such as those in South Africa and Northern Ireland.

Santos collected the prize – a gold medal, diploma and a check for 8 million Swedish crowns ($870,000) for his efforts to end the conflict with Marxist FARC rebels in which 220,000 people died.

“The Colombian peace agreement is a ray of hope in a world troubled by so many conflicts and so much intoleranc­e,” he said, adding that a US academic study called it the most comprehens­ive of 34 peace accords signed in the past three decades.

“It proves that what, at first, seems impossible, through perseveran­ce may become possible even in Syria or Yemen or South Sudan,” he told an audience including victims of the war as well as Norway’s King Harald.

The rebel Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was not invited, except for a Spanish lawyer to represent it. FARC leader Rodrigo Londono had been tipped by some Nobel watchers to share the prize with Santos.

The audience applauded a group of about 10 victims attending the ceremony, after Santos introduced them.

Among them was Leyner Palacios, a man who Santos said lost 32 relatives, including his parents and three brothers, to a 2002 FARC mortar attack on a church.

The peace deal almost collapsed in October after Colombian voters rejected it in a referendum, reckoning the first version was too lenient on the rebels. A revised deal was approved by Congress last month, but controvers­ially without a referendum demanded by a big opposition party.

In his speech, received with a standing ovation, Santos quoted what he called a “haunting question” from one of Dylan’s most famous songs: “How many deaths will it take ‘till he knows that too many people have died? The answer, my friend, is blowin’ in the wind.”

The other 2016 prizes – for Literature, Medicine, Physics, Chemistry and Economics – will be presented later in Stockholm. Dylan has said he won’t attend, citing “preexistin­g commitment­s.”

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