Colombia’s Farc rebels debut new Marxist political party
BOGOTA: Colombia’s leftist Farc rebel group will introduce its political party at a conference that started yesterday, a key step in its transition into a civilian organisation after more than 50 years of war and its first chance to announce policy to sceptical voters.
The six-day meeting in Bogota of Farc members, who have handed in more than 8 000 weapons to the UN during their demobilisation, is expected to conclude on Friday with a platform that the party, still officially unnamed, will campaign on in elections next year.
Under its 2016 peace deal with the government to end its part in a war that killed more than 220 000, most Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) fighters were granted amnesty and allowed to participate in politics.
Whether Colombians, many of whom revile the rebels, will be inspired to back them remains to be seen.
Farc’s often Marxist rhetoric strikes many as a throwback to their 1964 founding, but proposals for reforms to labyrinthine property laws may get traction with rural voters who struggle as subsistence farmers.
The peace accord, rejected by less than a 1% margin in a referendum before being modified and enacted, awards Farc’s party 10 automatic seats in Congress up to 2026, but the group may campaign for others.
“I think Farc will try for a regional consolidation, using the presence and influence they have in certain provinces,” said Catalina Jimenez, politics professor at Externado University.
“At a national level they need a large number of votes they still don’t have.”
Farc is open to coalitions, the group said. Fractured by in-fighting, leftist parties have long struggled in Colombia.