The Phnom Penh Post

Colombia-FARC ceasefire puts peace within reach

-

COLOMBIA’S government and the FARC guerrilla force were to sign a definitive ceasefire yesterday, taking one of the last crucial steps toward ending Latin America’s longest civil war.

The breakthrou­gh – while not yet a final peace accord – means a permanent end to fighting in a half-century conflict that has killed hundreds of thousands of people in the jungles of the major cocaine-producing country.

Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos and FARC leader Timoleon Jimenez were scheduled to sign the agreement at 1630 GMT in Havana where peace talks are taking place, negotiator­s said.

Santos tweeted he was “on the way to Havana to silence the guns forever.”

“We have successf ully reached agreement for the bilateral and final ceasefire and the end of hostilitie­s; the laying down of arms; security guarantees and the fight against the criminal organizati­ons responsibl­e for homicides and massacres,” the two sides said in a joint statement.

The deal resolves one of the final points in peace talks between the government and the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country’s largest rebel group.

Santos said this week he hopes to seal a full peace deal by July 20.

The Colombian conflict started in the 1960s as a rural uprising for land rights that spawned the communist FARC.

It has drawn in various leftist rebel groups, right-wing paramilita­ries and drug gangs over the decades. The violence has left 260,000 people dead, 45,000 missing and nearly 7 million displaced, according to official figures.

Human rights groups say atrocities have been committed on all sides. Many families are still searching for missing loved ones.

The ceasefire “means the end of the longest and most bloody conflict in the western hemisphere and a new opportunit­y to bet on democracy”, said Angelika Rettberg, a conflict resolution specialist at the University of the Andes.

However, the means of implementi­ng a final peace deal remain to be settled.

Santos’s government wants a referendum to put a seal of popular approval on the peace after three-and-a-half years of negotiatio­ns. The FARC was reluctant but has recently signalled it may accept such a plebiscite.

The two sides have signed provisiona­l accords on compensati­ng victims and fighting the drug trade that has fueled the conflict.

They are also discussing designatin­g zones where the FARC’s estimated 7,000 remaining fighters can gather for a UNsupervis­ed demobilisa­tion process.

“The UN is prepared to do whatever it can to strengthen the peace process,” its deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said on Wednesday.

“We hope it will lead to a final agreement and the end of this long war.”

The United States sent its Special Envoy Bernard Aronson to Havana to represent Washington yesterday.

US State Department spokesman John Kirby said the United States“hopes the parties will continue to make progress toward a final peace accord”.

Although peace with the FARC would virtually end the conf lict, other armed groups are still operating in Colombia.

Santos and the country’s secondbigg­est rebel group, the leftist National Liberation Army, have said they will start peace talks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia