Ceasefire as Pope heads to Colombia
Agreement with rebel group ELN seen as important step on road to peace for nation Life on the run ends for ‘Cocaine king’ mafia boss
Ahead of a historic visit by Pope Francis, Colombian officials yesterday reached a temporary ceasefire deal with the leftist rebels of the ELN, potentially putting the long troubled nation on track for a broader era of peace.
The deal with the ELN marks Colombia’s first ceasefire with an armed group founded in the 1960s with the aid of radical Catholic priests. It comes on the heels of a peace accord reached last year with what had been Colombia’s largest armed guerrilla group, the Farc.
The ELN, or the National Liberation Army, has long been Colombia’s second largest guerrilla movement, engaging in extortion, kidnappings and attacks on civilians and oil pipelines.
Under the 102-day ceasefire negotiated in Quito, Ecuador after months of talks and set to start on October 1, the ELN has pledged to halt those activities. In return, jailed ELN fighters would receive improved conditions and the Government would boost security for leftist community leaders, dozens of whom have been slain in recent months.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos announced the deal yesterday, suggesting the ceasefire had come together in part to honour the visit of Francis, the first Latin American pope. A figure who has railed against social injustice, Francis, who arrives in Colombia today, is revered even by leftist guerrillas. “The Pope will arrive at a unique moment in our history, when we are turning the page An alleged mafia boss nicknamed “the King of Cocaine” has been captured in South America after 23 years on the run.
Rocco Morabito, wanted by Italian police for allegedly masterminding the trafficking of cocaine from Latin America to Europe, was arrested in a hotel in Uruguay.
He is considered to be one of Italy’s five most dangerous fugitives.
During a search of his home in of an absurd conflict and we are looking toward the future,” Santos said in announcing the ceasefire.
Since rising to his office, Francis has presided over a surge of diplomatic efforts by his church in Latin America. Under the direction of the former cardinal of Buenos Aires, the Vatican helped broker the 2015 thaw in relations between Cuba and the United States, and has also sought to bring the Government and the opposition together in Venezuela.
A priest from Francis’ order of the Jesuits — Francisco de Roux — has played a key role in negotiations between the ELN and the Colombian Government. De Roux has called on the ELN, which for years was led by a series of Catholic priests subscribing to leftist ideals, to renounce violence.
“The Pope’s impending visit to Colombia is a key factor” in the ceasefire, said Michael Shifter, president of Inter-American Dialogue, an organisation based in Washington that promotes democracy and social equity in Latin America.
Yet Shifter and other analysts caution that a ceasefire, while promising, is still far from the lasting peace accord reached with the Farc.
The ELN, with 1500 to 2000 members, operates as a decentralised group. It remains unclear the extent to which its leadership can control its rank and file. Uruguay, police found 13 mobile phones, which investigators said were used for drugs deals, a 9mm pistol, ammunition, a hunting knife and 150 passport photos of himself in different guises.
Morabito, an alleged kingpin in the ’Ndrangheta mafia, is believed to have been living in Uruguay for around a decade under the alias Francisco Capeletto Souza. He had been able to obtain Brazilian identity documents, as well as the right to live in Uruguay.
His arrest was the result of a joint operation between police in South America and investigators in Calabria, the home of the ’Ndrangheta. The organised crime network, which for years has been extending its reach, makes millions by smuggling cocaine into Europe, often via Italy.
Morabito was arrested in a hotel in Punta del Este, a tourist resort about 150km from the capital, Montevideo, “after months of intense international co-operation in intelli- gence matters”, the Italian police said in a statement.
His false identity was known to Interpol, and when he checked into the hotel an alert was generated. His wife, a 54-year-old Angolan with a Portuguese passport, was also arrested.
Morabito is expected to be extradited back to Italy in the coming months, where he faces 30 years in prison for various crimes, including mafia association and drug trafficking.