Bangkok Post

FIRST COLOMBIA FARC REBELS COMPLETE DISARMAMEN­T: UN

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>> BOGOTA: A group of Colombian Farc rebels on Friday became the first to formally complete a disarmamen­t process under a peace accord designed to end a half-century-old conflict, United Nations monitors said.

“A first group of 12 members of the Farc received today from the UN mission a certificat­e of completion of individual disarmamen­t, which allows them to formally begin their reintegrat­ion into civilian life,” the UN said in a statement.

“With this event, a continuous process begins to certify the Farc members who are making the transition to civilian life after laying down their arms.”

The Farc is disarming under UN supervisio­n as part of last year’s accord, which the government says will effectivel­y end a 53-year civil conflict. The accord calls for the Farc to be allowed to transform into a political party.

Under the agreement, all the Farc’s weapons are supposed to be taken away by the United Nations by the end of this month to be destroyed. The arms were all supposed to have been handed over by May 1, but the UN said there were delays because some Farc members were late arriving at the agreed demobiliza­tion zones.

Some 7,000 Farc fighters are assembling at 26 such points in Colombia.

Under the accord, the UN is supposed to use the metal from the destroyed Farc weapons to build monuments to peace.

The government and the Farc, formally known as the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia and the country’s biggest rebel group, reached a deal after four years of negotiatio­ns in the Cuban capital.

Voters rejected it by a narrow margin in a referendum last October.

Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos and Farc leaders then drafted a new version of the accord and the government pushed it through Congress despite resistance from critics.

Opponents said the deal was too lenient on Farc members since it offered some of them reduced penalties for crimes committed during the conflict.

Santos won a Nobel Peace Prize for his peace efforts despite the referendum setback.

Under the deal Herminsul Arellan Barajas, one of the men convicted for a Farc bombing that killed 36 people in Bogota in 2003, was released from jail on parole on Friday, a source in the penitentia­ry service said.

The government in February opened negotiatio­ns with the last active rebel force, the National Liberation Army (ELN), in the hope of sealing a “complete peace”.

The government’s negotiatio­ns with the ELN are at a much earlier stage. The group is accused of continuing kidnapping­s despite the negotiatio­ns.

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