Los Angeles Times

Vote sets back ex-FARC rebels

Colombian candidates vowing to curtail peace deal take lead.

- By Chris Kraul Kraul is a special correspond­ent.

BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombia’s fragile peace deal was under pressure after candidates who have vowed to dismantle portions of the historic accord made strong showings in weekend congressio­nal and presidenti­al primary elections.

Former president and now center-right Sen. Alvaro Uribe won the largest number of votes in his successful reelection bid while his party’s presidenti­al candidate, Ivan Duque, crushed other conservati­ve contenders in the primary portion of the voting.

Both have said the peace deal signed by the government and the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, is too generous to the rebels, particular­ly justice provisions that set minimal terms for the most heinous of war crimes.

Followers of Nobel laureate and President Juan Manuel Santos and candidates of a rebel party fared poorly. The election marked the first time members of the rebel party had run for office.

Former Bogota Mayor Gustavo Petro also scored big Sunday in his presidenti­al primary. The former M-19 rebel is running as an outsider promising to shake up the political order. Petro’s strength at the polls is a clear sign of Colombian voters’ increasing disenchant­ment with old-style politics and a seemingly endless string of corruption scandals, said Bruce Bagley, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the University of Miami.

Uribe was president from 2002 to 2010 and remains a powerful presence on Colombia’s political scene, though he is ineligible for another term as president. Uribe founded and leads the Democratic Center faction, which after gains Sunday now has the most seats of any party in the Senate and the second most in the Chamber of Representa­tives.

The left-of-center candidate Petro generally supports the peace agreement and has promised to advance social programs to reduce the nation’s social and economic imbalances. Uribe and Duque have accused him of favoring a Hugo Chavez brand of socialism while Petro has countered with accusation­s that Uribe sponsored right-wing paramilita­ry violence when he was president.

Duque and Petro lead the polls ahead of the May 27 first round of presidenti­al voting. The top two finishers will meet in a June 17 runoff. No candidate among the dozen expected to run is likely to get a big enough chunk of the votes — 50% plus one — to avoid a second round.

Two other presidenti­al candidates, Sergio Fajardo of the Green Alliance and German Vargas Lleras of Radical Change, were not on the ballots Sunday but still have a chance of making the June 17 runoff, Bagley said, depending on the alliances they forge and their campaigns’ effectiven­ess.

Perhaps the biggest surprise of the balloting was the poor showing by candidates running under the banner of Santos’ Social Party of National Unity. Despite the sitting president’s internatio­nal prestige for having been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2016, he is unpopular at home because of a sluggish economy and rising drug violence. His signature peace agreement was opposed by more than half the population in an October 2016 referendum.

The Santos bloc lost seven seats in the Senate and 12 in the lower chamber, falling to fifth and fourth place, respective­ly.

Meanwhile, candidates of the FARC, the same initials as the rebel army but now standing as Spanish initials for the Common Alternativ­e Revolution­ary Force, made a miserable showing. Its candidates attracted fewer than 90,000 votes, compared with the 500,000 that Senate candidate and party spokesman Carlos Antonio Lozada set as a goal.

Rebranded now as politician­s, the former rebels have had difficulty escaping the long shadow left by half a century of killings, kidnapping­s and extortion, said political analyst Ariel Avila. He said many left-leaning voters chose other candidates they perceived as having better chances of winning.

Terms of the peace deal signed in November 2016 guaranteed the disarmed FARC at least 10 congressio­nal seats — five in the Senate and five in the Chamber — in the 2018 and 2022 Congresses. The former insurgents insisted on fielding a slate of candidates this year to demonstrat­e the grass-roots support they believed they enjoyed.

The FARC’s campaign was also hurt by the withdrawal last week of presidenti­al candidate Rodrigo Londono, who is also known as Timoleon Jimenez, or Timoshenko, who suffered a heart attack and underwent emergency surgery.

Turnout was 49% of 35 million eligible voters. Colombia’s Defense Ministry declared it the most violence-free election in half a century, largely because the FARC was now part of the political process and not an outside agitator.

“This is the first time in my life that I am voting and I am doing it for peace,” Senate candidate Pablo Catatumbo said Sunday. He along with Lozada, Ivan Marquez, Victoria Sandino and Sandra Ramirez, who was the partner of late FARC founder Manuel Marulanda, will occupy the five Senate seats assigned to the former rebels by the deal.

 ?? Ivan Valencia EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? COLOMBIAN presidenti­al candidate and former Bogota Mayor Gustavo Petro, shown arriving to vote in Bogota, scored big in Sunday’s primary elections.
Ivan Valencia EPA/Shuttersto­ck COLOMBIAN presidenti­al candidate and former Bogota Mayor Gustavo Petro, shown arriving to vote in Bogota, scored big in Sunday’s primary elections.

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