The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ex-Colombia FARC rebels seek forgivenes­s at tribunal

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BOGOTA: Former rebel FARC commanders in Colombia have appeared at a historic tribunal where for the first time they were made to answer for kidnapping­s and forced disappeara­nces under the terms of a peace deal.

“We apologise to all of them, we will do the impossible so they can know the truth of what happened, we will assume our responsibi­lities,” said Rodrigo ‘Timochenko’ Londono, the leader of what was until recently the most powerful guerrilla group in South America.

He was speaking at a tribunal that opened on Friday under a truth and reconcilia­tion system agreed with the government to recognise the hundreds of thousands of victims of more than a half century of confrontat­ion.

At the end of his appearance, the former guerrilla leader reaffirmed to the press commitment­s to contribute “as far as possible” towards reparation­s for those affected and to never again exercise violence.

During their long and failed struggle for power, the FARC resorted to abductions for economic and political purposes.

Thousands of hostages, including military, police and politician­s such as FrancoColo­mbian Ingrid Betancourt, were kept for years deep in the jungle before being rescued or released, with many others perishing in captivity.

The prosecutio­n has documented 8,163 victims of kidnapping involving the rebels.

The Special Jurisdicti­on for Peace (known by its Spanish acronym JEP) is examining the period between 1993 and 2012.

Thirty-one FARC commanders were summoned to the first hearing, but only Timochenko and two others appeared in person.

The rest sent lawyers, while one — Jesus Santrich, currently detained in Bogota and awaiting extraditio­n to the United States on drug traffickin­g charges — participat­ed by video conference.

The ex-rebels pledged to confess their crimes and make reparation­s to the victims as part of the 2016 agreement that disarmed 7,000 FARC fighters and led to the group becoming a political party last year.

Fulfilling the terms will result in five to eight-year-punishment­s in a non-prison setting that has yet to be defined.

If they fail to live up to their obligation­s they are liable to receive between 15 to 20 years in prison.

Outgoing president Juan Manuel Santos celebrated the start of the trials.

“This is a very important signal, because what it means is that everything that had been said about this being a peace without accounting was untrue,” he told reporters.

The peace agreement, signed in 2016, has divided Colombian society.

Half vehemently defends the agreement, while the other says the concession­s it offered the rebels are too great. — AFP

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RODRIGO LONDONO

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