The Phnom Penh Post

Colombia eyeing new front in peace negotiatio­ns

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COLOMBIA’Sgovernmen­thopes to open a new front today in efforts to bury a half-century armed conflict, starting talks with the country’s second-biggest rebel force.

An accord with the leftist National Liberation Army (ELN) was meant to be the icing on the cake of a historic agreement signed last month with Colombia’s biggest rebel group, the FARC. That was until voters surprised the government by rejecting the FARC accord in a referendum on October 2.

Now, President Juan Manuel Santos is trying to salvage the FARC accord while also talks with the ELN. His government plans to formally establish negotiatio­ns today in the Ecuadoran capital Quito with the ELN, Colombia’s second-biggest insurgent group.

Like the FARC, the ELN formed in 1964 and is blamed for killings and kidnapping­s during a multisided 52-year civil war.

Hostage dispute

A dispute over the last hostage held by the ELN, former congressma­n Odin Sanchez, has threatened to delay the start of talks, however. The government insisted the ELN free all its hostages before talks could begin – just as it had at the start of negotiatio­ns with the FARC in 2012.

The ELN bristled this week after the government’s lead negotiator Juan Camilo Restrepo issued an ultimatum for Sanchez’s release. But a Catholic Church spokesman close to the negotiatio­ns said onTuesday moves were under way to free him in time.

The rebel force said on Twitter late Monday: “Overcoming dif- ficulties, the ELN delegation for the peace talks is getting ready to be in Quito.”

Analyst Camilo Echandia of Colombia’s Externado University said the ELN was reluctant to accept the release of hostages as a condition for talks, even though it would show a “will for peace.”

“That is the big difference between the ELN and the FARC,” he said. “These negotiatio­ns are going to be very complicate­d.”

Incidents involving ELN forces have kept tensions high over recent months.

The Colombian army blamed the ELN for a non-fatal explosion at an oil pipeline near the Venezuelan border on Sunday.

“The ELN guerrilla group comes strengthen­ed to the negotiatio­ns with the government. Over the past three years this group has increased its level of violence,” Colombia’s Conflict Analysis Resource Center [CERAC] said this month. “This public phase of negotiatio­ns comes in the midst of the conflict, so the ELN will probably maintain a high level of violent action.”

Colombian authoritie­s estimate the ELN currently has 1,500 members. The army says hundreds have deserted or been captured over recent months. It said it has seized tonnes of cocaine and marijuana from the ELN and destroyed drug laboratori­es under its control.

Colombia’s territoria l and ideologica­l conf lict has drawn in various guerrilla and paramilita­ry groups, drug gangs and state forces over the decades. The conf lict has killed more than 260,000 people and left 45,000 missing, according to Colombian authoritie­s.

 ?? ARMY OF COLOMBIA/AFP ?? Members of ELN, which demobilise­d on October 17, hand their weapons to Colombian Armed Forces troops in Buenaventu­ra on October 18, just days before peace talks are set to open.
ARMY OF COLOMBIA/AFP Members of ELN, which demobilise­d on October 17, hand their weapons to Colombian Armed Forces troops in Buenaventu­ra on October 18, just days before peace talks are set to open.

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