The Korea Times

Colombian congress ratifies peace deal

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BOGOTA (AP) — Congress formally ratified a revised peace agreement with Colombia’s biggest leftist rebel group, capping a torturous four years of negotiatio­ns, a stunning referendum rejection, last-minute compromise­s and two signing ceremonies.

The initial pact was narrowly rejected by voters last month, and President Juan Manuel Santos decided to skip a referendum on the new version and go directly to congress, where the deal’s supporters hold a majority. Opponents, led by former President Alvaro Uribe, boycotted the legislativ­e votes, which resulted in unanimous approval by the Senate on Tuesday and by the lower house late Wednesday.

The new 310-page accord with the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia introduced 50 changes to the initial deal in an attempt to assuage opponents as the govern- ment seeks to end a 52-year conflict that has killed more than 220,000 people and driven almost 8 million from their homes.

The modificati­ons include a prohibitio­n on foreign magistrate­s judging alleged crimes by government or FARC troops, and a commitment from the rebels to forfeit assets, some amassed through drug traffickin­g, to help compensate victims. But the FARC rejected demands for jail sentences for rebel leaders responsibl­e for atrocities and stricter limits on their future participat­ion in politics.

The compromise­s weren’t enough for some of the deal’s opponents.

“There needs to be a balance between peace and justice, but in this agreement there’s complete impunity,” Uribe, now a senator, said during the Senate debate. 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 said ratificati­on will set in motion the start of a six-month process in which the FARC’s 8,000-plus guerrillas will concentrat­e in some 20 rural areas and turn over their weapons to United Nations monitors. “Tomorrow a new era begins,” he said Wednesday.

But the rebels insist their troops won’t start demobilizi­ng until lawmakers pass an amnesty law freeing some 2,000 rebels in jail.

“D-Day starts after the first actions are implemente­d,” the rebel leader Pastor Alape, part of the FARC’s 10-member secretaria­t, said last week after the new accord was signed. “The president unfortunat­ely has been demonstrat­ing an attitude that creates confusion in the country.”

The debate over amnesty highlights one of the peace deal’s early challenges: the need for congress to pass legislatio­n implementi­ng the accord and setting up special peace tribunals.

Santos was initially counting on swift approval of the needed changes that in some cases require constituti­onal amendments. But the referendum loss has left the status of his fast-track authority in doubt, awaiting a ruling by the constituti­onal court. Experts say a solid pro-peace coalition could crumble if implementa­tion drags on and butts against the political maneuverin­g for the 2018 presidenti­al election.

Beyond the legal hurdles, there is also concern FARC fighters will wind up joining criminal gangs rampant across Colombia or the much-smaller rebel National Liberation Army, which for months has been playing cat and mouse with the government over opening a peace process of its own. On Wednesday, both sides said they would delay until January any decision about when to start talks.

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