The Borneo Post (Sabah)

After decades of war, FARC rebels to debut political party

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BOGOTA: Colombia’s leftist FARC rebel group will debut its political party at a conference beginning yesterday, a key step in its transition into a civilian organizati­on after more than 50 years of war and its first chance to announce policy to skeptical voters.

The six-day meeting in Bogota of FARC members, who have handed in more than 8,000 weapons to the United Nations during their demobiliza­tion, is expected to conclude Friday with a platform that the party, still officially un-named, will campaign on in elections next year.

Under its 2016 peace deal with the government to end its part in a war that killed more than 220,000, the majority of Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) fighters were granted amnesty and allowed to participat­e in politics. Whether Colombians, many of whom revile the rebels, will be inspired to back them remains to be seen.

The FARC’s often-old fashioned Marxist rhetoric strikes many as a throwback to their 1964 founding, but proposals for reforms to labyrinthi­ne property laws may get traction with rural voters who struggle as subsistenc­e farmers.

The peace accord, rejected by less than a 1 per cent margin in a referendum before being modified and enacted, awards the FARC’s party 10 automatic seats in Congress through 2026, but the group may campaign for others.

“I think the FARC will try for a regional consolidat­ion, using the presence and influence they have in certain provinces,” said Catalina Jimenez, politics professor at Externado University.

“At a national level they need a large amount of votes they still don’t have.”

The FARC is open to coalitions, the group said this week.

Fractured by in-fighting, leftist parties have long struggled in conservati­ve-leaning Colombia, despite some success in winning urban positions.

“We have to define our course of action, which will surely bring up the need to have coalitions,” FARC secretaria­t member Pastor Alape told reporters on Friday, adding the group wants a “big political convergenc­e that redefines the limits of the left.”

Colombia’s ‘semi-feudal’ state will need to be modernised, and the country must wake up to the scourge of corruption, Alape said.

Both legislativ­e and presidenti­al elections will take place in 2018. It is not yet clear for which positions the FARC will field candidates.

Widespread corruption scandals will likely be a top issue for the crowded field of 2018 presidenti­al candidates, as will bettering the daily lives of Colombians, many of whom say improvemen­ts to security, public education and healthcare are desperatel­y needed.

The FARC says the government of President Juan Manuel Santos, which gives a certain amount of regulated funding to each party, should help carry the costs of the conference, given the rebels have handed over their assets to be used as reparation­s for victims of the war.

But though the peace deal is the cornerston­e of Santos’ legacy, the government has raised doubts about the veracity of the rebels’ US$324 million asset list, creating a commission to check the FARC have included all profits they may have earned from extortion, ransoms and drug traffickin­g, and saying the group must play by the same rules as any other party.

The new party has no official name yet, though one rebel leader has said it could be called the Revolution­ary Alternativ­e Force of Colombia, preserving the FARC initials in Spanish.

I think the FARC will try for a regional consolidat­ion, using the presence and influence they have in certain provinces. Catalina Jimenez, politics professor at Externado University

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo shows FARC commander Carlos Lozada during an interview with AFP in front of the images of late FARC leaders (left to right) Manuel Marulanda Velez, Jorge Briceno Suarez, Jacobo Arenas and Alfonso Cano in Bogota.
— AFP photo File photo shows FARC commander Carlos Lozada during an interview with AFP in front of the images of late FARC leaders (left to right) Manuel Marulanda Velez, Jorge Briceno Suarez, Jacobo Arenas and Alfonso Cano in Bogota.

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