Los Angeles Times

Peace deal at risk in Colombia vote

The presidenti­al election could lead to the end of the FARC accord, analysts say.

- By Chris Kraul Kraul is a special correspond­ent.

BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombians go to the polls Sunday in a historic presidenti­al election that could decide the fate of the already precarious peace agreement by the country’s largest and most violent rebel group and the government of outgoing president and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Juan Manuel Santos.

The election is the first in Colombia since the disarmamen­t of the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, under terms of the peace deal signed in November 2016 that ended 52 years of civil conflict. Depending on who wins, analysts say, the vote could presage the end of the accord, which is already on shaky ground amid assassinat­ions of former combatants and allegation­s of noncomplia­nce by both sides.

Surveys indicate that none of the five presidenti­al candidates is strong enough to garner the 50% plus one votes needed to avoid a June runoff. Two diametrica­lly opposed candidates are likely to proceed to the second round: right-wing politician Ivan Duque, who opposes critical elements of the peace deal, and leftist former guerrilla Gustavo Petro, who generally supports the pact.

Also running are former Medellin Mayor Sergio Fajardo; former senator and Cabinet minister German Vargas Lleras; and former vice president and peace negotiator Humberto de la Calle. Although 30 million Colombians are eligible to vote, turnout of no more than 15 million is expected.

Duque, a 41-year-old economist, led his opponents in opinion polls prior to balloting with 35% of those questioned saying he would get their vote. He is favored to beat Petro, a former Bogota mayor, or any of the other candidates he would face in a runoff next month.

The front-runner status of Duque, a relatively unknown quantity in Colombian politics, is testimony to the enduring power of his patron, former President and now Sen. Alvaro Uribe. Many Colombians credit Uribe for turning the tide militarily against the FARC with $10 billion in military and anti-terrorism aid from the U.S. under so-called Plan Colombia.

Santos was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for brokering the deal with the FARC, but the pact is unpopular among many Colombians. Uribe has been a strident critic of the pact with the rebels, favoring instead a military victory, which he maintained was close at hand when he left office in 2010.

Duque, a former InterAmeri­can Developmen­t Bank staffer and holder of a Georgetown University graduate degree, has pledged to amend the justice provisions in the accord so that FARC members convicted of heinous crimes serve prison sentences; rebel leaders have vowed never to submit to such punishment.

All other candidates have publicly pledged to support the peace process if elected.

Arlene Tickner, an internatio­nal relations professor at Rosario University in Bogota, said the agreement already is in serious jeopardy because of “slow implementa­tion, lack of money and other factors” and that changes proposed by Duque could spell its doom.

“There is growing distrust of the process on the part of many demobilize­d guerrillas,” Tickner said. “So depending on who passes to the second round, we will see efforts to stall it even more or reinvigora­te it. While I think it’s impossible to dismantle the peace deal completely, it could be dismembere­d to the point it ends up falling apart.”

Duque also has said he supports the extraditio­n to the U.S. of Jesus Santrich, a former top FARC commander who was arrested in April on charges of facilitati­ng a drug deal with a Mexican cartel. A federal court in New York has requested Santrich’s extraditio­n.

Although the peace pact guarantees ex-rebels lenient detention sentences under special peace tribunals for crimes committed before the accord was signed, it stipulates that ex-fighters are subject to ordinary justice for crimes committed after that point.

As a result, Duque and other hard-liners say Santrich, who is accused of traffickin­g drugs after the deadline, should be extradited. For its part, the FARC, which has morphed into a political party using the same initials, alleges that Santrich, who was set to take a seat in Congress, was framed and that an extraditio­n would violate the pact. Peace deal advocates argue extraditio­n should be denied to salvage the accord.

In any case, Santrich’s arrest has fortified peace deal critics who say the FARC has not lived up to its end of the bargain by failing to provide authoritie­s with more informatio­n on drug-traffickin­g routes and contacts it developed with cartels during the conflict. For that reason, the U.S. State Department still classifies the FARC political party as a terrorist entity.

“Duque is Uribe’s handpicked candidate, a smart guy, technicall­y competent, but with few if any identifiab­le independen­t political positions of his own,” said Bruce Bagley, a University of Miami professor. “If he is elected, make no mistake, we will have ‘Uribe 2.0’ back in office.”

Duque also has benefited from what Bagley and Tickner described as a campaign to stigmatize Petro as a “Castro-Chavista” populist candidate who would lead Colombia down a path to socialism and economic ruin as happened in neighborin­g Venezuela under the late President Hugo Chavez. Chavez was a political protege of Cuba’s Fidel Castro.

Petro’s left-leaning campaign has emphasized the need to address social and economic inequality in Colombia, which, with its 28% poverty rate, is one of Latin America’s most economical­ly and socially unequal countries.

 ?? Fernando Vergara Associated Press ?? SOLDIERS PATROL the outskirts of Bogota, Colombia, the day before the presidenti­al election, which is expected to go to a runoff.
Fernando Vergara Associated Press SOLDIERS PATROL the outskirts of Bogota, Colombia, the day before the presidenti­al election, which is expected to go to a runoff.
 ?? Luis Acosta AFP/Getty Images ?? COLOMBIAN PRESIDENTI­AL candidates Ivan Duque, left, Gustavo Petro and German Vargas Lleras prepare for a televised debate in Bogota last week.
Luis Acosta AFP/Getty Images COLOMBIAN PRESIDENTI­AL candidates Ivan Duque, left, Gustavo Petro and German Vargas Lleras prepare for a televised debate in Bogota last week.

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