Arab News

Colombia’s FARC rebels begin disarming

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BOGOTA: The Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia ( FARC) rebels began disarming Wednesday under UN supervisio­n, the culminatio­n of a historic peace process to end half a century of conflict.

After weeks of mustering its troops at designated disarmamen­t zones, the FARC will start to inventory its weapons and destroy munitions, its leaders and the government announced Tuesday.

“As a concrete first step in the process of laying down our arms and as a sign of our unconditio­nal commitment to peace, FARC members’ weapons... will be turned over to the United Nations,” FARC leader Ivan Marquez told a press conference.

The disarmamen­t of the country’s largest guerrilla army will leave rival movement ELN — currently engaged in rocky peace talks with the government — as the only rebel group still waging a multi- sided war that has killed 260,000 people.

The Cold War- era conflict, which has also left 60,000 people missing and uprooted 6.9 million, is the last major armed conflict in the Americas.

Colombia, South America’s third economy and the world’s biggest cocaine producer, has been torn since the 1960s by fighting that has drawn in multiple leftist rebel groups, right- wing paramilita­ry units, drug cartels and the army.

President Juan Manuel Santos is scrambling to seal a “complete peace” with both the FARC and the ELN.

Both leftist rebel groups took up arms against the government in 1964, in the aftermath of a crushed peasant uprising. The FARC, has some 6,900 fighters.

It signed a peace deal with the government in November after four years of negotiatio­ns in Cuba, but implementa­tion is running slightly behind schedule.

Under the deal, the FARC was due to surrender 30 percent of its weapons to the UN by Wednesday. But that can only happen once the inventory is complete.

The government’s high commission­er for peace, Sergio Jaramillo, said a June 1 deadline for the rebels to fully disarm would be maintained, however.

Santos, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in October, tweeted Tuesday that Colombia had begun “an irreversib­le stage in the consolidat­ion of peace.”

However, separate talks with the ELN, or National Liberation Army, took a hit this week when the rebels claimed responsibi­lity for a Feb. 19 bombing that killed a police officer and wounded more than 20 at a bullring in Bogota.

The bombing came 12 days after the talks opened in the Ecuadoran capital Quito — a bloody reminder of the violence Colombia still faces.

Experts warn the ELN could be a tougher negotiatin­g partner than the FARC because it has more hardline demands for sweeping social change, plus a decentrali­zed command structure that could make it harder to convince the rank and file to accept an eventual deal.

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