Lodi News-Sentinel

Colombian Congress passes amended peace deal to end decades of civil war

- By Chris Kraul

BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombia’s Congress passed an amended peace accord with the country’s largest rebel group late Wednesday, nearly two months after voters rejected an earlier version of the deal in a national referendum.

The passage is a victory for President Juan Manuel Santos and signals the end of the continent’s longest-running civil conflict, but opponents who wanted the deal submitted to a national plebiscite are raising objections.

Santos’ negotiator­s worked out the deal with representa­tives of the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, during nearly four years of talks in Havana. But Santos faces challenges in executing and financing terms of the accord now that he has bypassed voters to push it through.

“Tomorrow a new era begins, an era of peace with this adversary we have had for 52 years,” Santos said Wednesday during a graduation ceremony for officers at the nation’s largest military academy.

The House of Representa­tives voted 130-0 to accept the deal a day after the Senate voted unanimousl­y for it. Opposition legislator­s in the Democratic Center party led by former President Alvaro Uribe, a fierce critic of the deal, boycotted the vote in both chambers. Nineteen representa­tives abstained in the House.

Voters narrowly rejected the original version of the accord in a nationwide plebiscite Oct. 2. Many thought terms of the deal were too generous to the FARC, which has been at war with the state since 1964.

Santos neverthele­ss was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize days later for his efforts to end the conflict.

After several meetings with Uribe and his allies following the plebiscite, government negotiator­s returned to Havana and incorporat­ed 50 changes into the deal.

Among the changes were clauses placing greater restrictio­ns on rebels’ movements and requiring the rebels to disclose drug traffickin­g routes. They must also give inventorie­s of their assets to be used in paying reparation­s to war victims.

But Uribe and other critics said the accord signed by the government and the FARC on Nov. 24 was still too lenient. Rebels are guaranteed access to congressio­nal seats and will be given minimum house arrest terms for war crimes.

Even with a peace deal finally passed, the path ahead may not be as smooth as Santos and the FARC would like. They await a crucial constituti­onal court decision, expected in the coming days, on whether Congress can use “fast track” authority in passing 30 or more enabling laws to implement the deal.

If such authority is given, the disarmamen­t process should begin by New Year’s and end in four to six months, said Adam Isacson, a Colombia expert at the Washington Office on Latin America think tank.

But the court could deny such authority because the revised peace deal was not put to another nationwide vote. In that case, Santos would have two options: hold another plebiscite to obtain the accelerate­d legislativ­e powers, or submit the enabling laws to the normal legislativ­e process, which could take up to a year and half.

Among the enabling laws to be passed are those needed to set up transition­al justice tribunals, restitutio­n procedures and land reform.

At the top of the peace accord’s legislativ­e agenda is an amnesty law that would absolve FARC members of the crime of rebellion. They have said they will not begin moving to 27 specially designated “relocation zones” until such a law is in place to guarantee they won’t be arrested, Isacson said.

A cease-fire has been in effect since July 2015, but observers fear it may not hold if implementa­tion bogs down.

About 300 United Nations monitors are in Colombia and prepared to oversee the relocation of rebels and their disarmamen­t. They will collect and store the rebels’ weapons in locked cargo containers until the accord is fully implemente­d.

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