The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Right-wing parties opposed to FARC peace deal lead Colombia vote

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BOGOTA: Right-wing parties opposed to a peace deal with the FARC won historic elections in Colombia Sunday but fell short of a majority in polls that saw the former rebels enter the Congress.

The hardliners’ victory raises questions about the future of the peace agreement signed with President Juan Manuel Santos in November 2016.

Santos said the polls were “the safest, most transparen­t elections” in the country’s recent history, with the FARC spurning jungle warfare for politics, and the ELN – the country’s last active rebel group – observing a ceasefire.

“This is the first time in more than half a century that the FARC, instead of sabotaging the election, are taking part in it,” he said, adding that the ELN had “respected” their ceasefire.

The Centro Democratic­o party of ex-president and senator Alvaro Uribe, a fierce opponent of the peace agreement, polled the most votes, winning 19 seats in the Senate and 33 in the lower house.

But centrist and leftist parties also polled strongly to deprive the right of a majority.

“There are no big changes, there are adjustment­s,” Frederic Masse, an expert in armed conflict and the peace process at Externado University, told AFP.

The peace accord with the nowrenamed Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guarantees their new political party 10 of the 280 seats in the new Congress, five in the Senate and five in the Chamber of Deputies.

“It’s the first time in my life that I’ve voted and I do it for peace,” said Pablo Catatumbo, a former FARC commander who was assured a senate seat.

The party uses the same Spanish acronym, which now stands for the Common Alternativ­e Revolution­ary Force, and replaced its crossed-rifles insignia with a red rose when it became a political party under the deal.

Opinion polls had given the FARC little chance of adding to its 10 free seats, following a disastrous campaign during which its rebelsturn­ed-politician­s were largely drowned out by a tide of public revulsion over crimes committed during the conflict.

In the end it polled 0.35 per cent in the Senate vote, and only 0.22 per cent of the vote for the lower house.

Analysts said the party would now focus on building grassroots support for upcoming local elections.

Voters also chose the candidates from the right-wing and leftist coalitions who will contest the presidenti­al election in May, in primaries held in parallel to the legislativ­e vote.

Ivan Duque, of Uribe’s party, won the right-wing primary with more than 2.7 million votes, or 67 per cent of the poll, and will spearhead hardline opposition to the peace deal.

Gustavo Petro, a former Bogota mayor who is seeking to become conservati­ve Colombia’s first leftist president, will oppose him after winning nearly two million votes, 85 per cent of the poll, in his primary.

Opinion polls had predicted a triumphfor­hardlineco­nservative­s like Uribe who want to scrap the agreement, pushing on to win the presidenti­al election in a few months.

Under the peace accord, FARC disarmed its 7,000 fighters in order to join the political process, agreed to confess to wartime crimes and pay reparation­s to victims.

This infuriates many Colombians, in particular the right wing, which is vowing to win the presidenti­al election and amend the peace deal.

Maria Maldonado, a 65-year-old pensioner who voted in Bogota, was in no mood to forgive and forget.

“I have a lot of memories. Of all the compatriot­s who were murdered and buried, and nothing happened.

“And now we’re going to allow these people to manage us knowing that they have left us so many tragedies?” she said.

But much of the peace agreement has already been implemente­d, including the rebels disarming and demobilisi­ng.

Analysts say a hard-right government could block the implementa­tion of the rest of the pact, including agrarian reform and the special justice deal under which repentant rebels can avoid jail by paying reparation­s.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photocopie­s of ballots for one of the two main political blocs holding primary elections at the same time of the parliament­ary elections in Colombia, are available at a polling station after the originals ran out, in Medellin, Antioquia Department,...
— AFP photo Photocopie­s of ballots for one of the two main political blocs holding primary elections at the same time of the parliament­ary elections in Colombia, are available at a polling station after the originals ran out, in Medellin, Antioquia Department,...
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Petro speaks to the press after voting at a polling station in Bogota.
— AFP photo Petro speaks to the press after voting at a polling station in Bogota.
 ??  ?? Juan Manuel Santos
Juan Manuel Santos

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