Bangkok Post

Troops kill 11 Farc rebel dissidents

- EPA-EFE

BOGOTA: Colombian troops killed 11 dissidents of the disbanded Farc guerrilla group, officials said on Monday, as a fight looms over the future of a 2016 peace agreement in runoff presidenti­al elections.

The military operation took place on Sunday in the south of the country as Colombians voted in the first round of presidenti­al elections that left a hardline conservati­ve and a former leftist guerrilla vying for the presidency.

Defence Minister Luis Carlos Villegas said the operation in Montanita in the southern department of Caqueta left “11 dead and two wounded, including a minor who had been recruited by force”.

The 13 were part of an armed faction commanded by a former Farc rebel leader, Rodrigo Cadete, who rejected the 2016 peace agreement with t he government of President Juan Manuel Santos.

The minister said the groups had been making threats against the mayor of the Caqueta capital of Florencia as well as an energy company in the region.

“The criminals had been demanding extortion payments from businesses” in Florencia and its surroundin­g area, the army said in a statement.

Under the peace accord, the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) disarmed its 7,000 fighters in order to join the political process. It is now a political party.

However, remnants of the rebel force — estimated to number about 1,200 — are still active in the southern border areas, financing their operations through drug traffickin­g and extortion rackets.

“We will not drop our guard against residual groups. We will continue fighting them with the utmost forcefulne­ss,” Mr Santos said on Twitter.

Sunday’s military action was a jarring reminder that embers of Colombia’s 50-year-old conflict are still burning despite the peace accord with the Farc, once Latin America’s largest guerrilla group.

Besides contending with remnants of the Farc, Mr Santos’s government has yet to conclude a peace accord with the smaller National Liberation Army, or ELN.

Negotiatio­ns with the ELN resumed in Havana earlier this month, and its rebel forces observed a five-day ceasefire during the elections.

But the future of the peace accord has emerged as a key and divisive issue in the elections, which go to a runoff on June 17.

The top votegetter in Sunday’s round of balloting was conservati­ve Ivan Duque, who has vowed to rewrite the accord with the Farc if elected.

Mr Duque, who argues that Farc leaders got off too lightly, called for a “Colombia where peace coincides with justice” after the results were announced, reiteratin­g his desire to revise — without “shredding” — the pact with Farc.

He faces off against Gustavo Petro, a former Bogota mayor who received 25% of the vote to Mr Duque’s 39.7%.

A past member of the now disbanded M-19 guerrilla group, Mr Petro is the first leftist to contest a runoff in Colombia. Promising “change” and to fight corruption and inequality, Mr Petro gained momentum as the campaign progressed, outdistanc­ing two other candidates — former Medellin mayor Sergio Fajardo and Mr Santos’s peace negotiator, Humberto de la Calle.

“It’s obviously going to be very polarised in the second round,” said analyst Andres Macais.

 ??  ?? Colombian army soldiers patrol in Tibu, northern Santander, Colombia, last month.
Colombian army soldiers patrol in Tibu, northern Santander, Colombia, last month.

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