Global Times - Weekend

From gun battles to tourism

Colombia’s ex-rebels turn rafting guides

- Reuters

Nine former rebel fighters, who traded their guns, battle fatigues and heavy rucksacks for paddles, helmets and life jackets, launch four rafts laden with visitors into the turbulent Pato River, deep in Colombia’s dense Amazon jungle.

The former guerrillas from the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) have chosen rafting as their path to reintegrat­ion, as the government pushes to make tourism a top engine of the Andean nation’s economy.

“During the conflict, this region was rough, there were bullets and bombs all the time. Today, so much has changed – many people come to see the waterfalls, the mountain, the river,” guide Duberney Moreno, 34, a 13-year veteran of the FARC, said on Friday.

Nearly 13,000 former combatants and their unarmed sympathize­rs are participat­ing in a reintegrat­ion process agreed as part of a 2016 peace deal to end more than 52 years of war with the government.

Reintegrat­ion is considered fundamenta­l to ensuring former FARC members do not return to the battlefiel­d with smaller rebel group the National Liberation Army (ELN), numerous crime gangs and dissident groups that refused to demobilize.

The conflict in Colombia has killed more than 260,000 people and millions more have been displaced, suffered sexual violence or been maimed by land mines or bombs.

Implementa­tion of the polarizing deal has advanced slowly, but the FARC is now a political party with 10 guaranteed seats in Congress through 2026.

Many former fighters have returned home to reunite with their families, but some 5,000 have remained in 24 demobiliza­tion zones like the one on the Pato, turning them into makeshift towns built on Marxist principles.

Certified rafters

The government has budgeted some $1.6million to help those in the zones, which are protected by government forces, start some 300 farming, ranching, shoemaking, fishery, woodworkin­g and now tourism projects.

Many ex-combatants, most of whom come from poor, rural background­s, have also contribute­d the money they were given upon demobiliza­tion to the projects.

Moreno and eight other former fighters got 200 hours of guide training and are now certified by the Internatio­nal Rafting Federation.

The site in Caqueta province cost $20,000 to construct and features

hiking trails and lodging. Former fighters cook meals and drive visitors two hours by rutted road from the nearest large town. “We have to keep supporting these initiative­s – they create confidence in the peace process,” said Jessica Fit Faieta, d deputy t chief hi f of f th the U United it d N Nations’ ti ’ mission i i in Colombia, which helps manage reintegrat­ion. President Ivan Duque, who took office in August, has said tourism could be the country’s new economic driver. Travel to Colombia has spiked in recent years, as stereotype­s about violence are offset by positive media coverage of the country’s diverse destinatio­ns. “I want tourism to be Colombia’s new oil and for it to be the great invigorato­r of economic activity,” Duque said at a recent event. More than 3.3 million tourists visited Colombia in 2017, a 23.9 percent jump from 2016. Figures from the past two years were more than double rates in 2010 and before, when just 1.4 million people visited.

The government estimates tourism has the potential to generate $6 billion annually and some 300,000 jobs.

Colombia has coastline on both the Caribbean and the Pacific Ocean, Amazonian jungle, Andean glaciers and cosmopolit­an urban areas, as well as a plethora of adventure sports and wildlife.

Moreno and his colleagues are optimistic about their future on the river.

“We want peace,” Moreno said, standing on a beach along the Pato in the suffocatin­g heat. “We believe a different Colombia is possible.”

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 ??  ?? Top: A group of the press and government representa­tives practice rafting guided by ex-FARC rebels in Miravalle, Colombia, on November 9. An ex-FARC rebel, rafting guide and instructor, speaks with members of the police and the army in Miravalle, Colombia, on November 9. VCG Photos:
Top: A group of the press and government representa­tives practice rafting guided by ex-FARC rebels in Miravalle, Colombia, on November 9. An ex-FARC rebel, rafting guide and instructor, speaks with members of the police and the army in Miravalle, Colombia, on November 9. VCG Photos:
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 ??  ?? Page Editor: luoyunzhou@globaltime­s.com.cn
Page Editor: luoyunzhou@globaltime­s.com.cn

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