Deccan Chronicle

Colombia Congress ratifies peace accord with rebels

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Bogota, Dec. 1: After five decades of war, more than four years of negotiatio­ns and two signing ceremonies, Colombia’s Congress formally ratified a peace agreement allowing leftist rebels to enter politics.

The 310-page revised accord was approved unanimousl­y by the lower house on Thursday, which voted a day after the Senate approved the same text 75-0 following a protest walkout by the opposition led by former President Alvaro Uribe.

The accord introduces some 50 changes intended to assuage critics who led a campaign that saw Colombians narrowly reject the original accord in a referendum last month. President Juan Manuel Santos has said there won’t be a second referendum.

Revisions range from a prohibitio­n on foreign magistrate­s judging alleged crimes by government troops or by the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia to a commitment from the rebels to forfeit assets, some amassed through drug traffickin­g, to help compensate their victims. But the FARC wouldn’t go along with the Opposition’s strongest demands jail sentences for rebel leaders behind atrocities and stricter limits on their future participat­ion in politics.

“There needs to be a balance between peace and justice, but in this agreement there’s complete impunity,” Uribe, now a senator said.

Other senators accused him of standing in the way of a peace deal that he pursued with the FARC as president in 2002-10.

Santos says ratificati­on will set in motion the start of a six-month process in which the FARC’s 8,000plus guerrillas will concentrat­e in some 20 rural areas and turn over their weapons to UN monitors.

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