Chattanooga Times Free Press

Former Colombia rebels trying their hand at politics with a new party

- BY CHRISTINE ARMARIO

BOGOTA, Colombia — After more than five decades of battle in Colombia’s jungles, the nation’s largest rebel movement initiated the launch of its political party Sunday at a concrete convention center in the capital, vowing to upend the country’s traditiona­l conservati­sm with the creation of an alternativ­e leftist coalition.

The Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia will transform into a political party under a new, still-to-be-announced name as part of a historic peace deal signed last year. The accords guarantee the excombatan­ts 10 seats in Congress and the same funding the state provides to the nation’s 13 other political parties, in addition to a halfmillio­n dollars in funding to begin a think tank to develop their political ideology.

“We are taking an extraordin­ary step in the history of the common people’s struggle in Colombia,” said Rodrigo Londono, better known by his nom de guerre Timochenko, to an audience of former guerrillas dressed in white T-shirts with the hashtag #NuveoParti­do (#NewParty) on the back.

“This doesn’t mean we are renouncing in any way our fundamenta­l principles or societal project,” he said.

The organizati­on has signaled it will adhere to its Marxist roots and focus on winning votes from peasants, workers and the urban middle class with a social justice platform, but it faces opposition from many who identify the guerrillas with kidnapping­s and terrorism.

A poll released in August found fewer than 10 percent of Colombians said they had total confidence in the rebels as a political party and a large majority said they’d never vote a former guerrilla into Congress.

“They’re not going to be received very warmly in most of Colombia,” said Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America think tank. “Their human rights record hurt them. Their media image is terrible. Most Colombians quite simply aren’t socialists or communists.”

But, he added, “All is not lost. A message of wanting to redistribu­te wealth and undo economic injustice could probably do quite well in a lot of poor areas of Colombia.”

The group’s entrance into politics has been met with fierce resistance from leaders like former President Alvaro Uribe, one of the peace agreement’s staunchest critics. After passing a law earlier this year ratifying the group as a political party, the nation’s Supreme Court is now debating the legislatio­n’s constituti­onality. Critics say the former rebels shouldn’t be allowed to participat­e in politics before first going through a special peace tribunal.

“The fact that a war criminal could become the president of Colombia makes no sense,” former Peace Commission­er Camilo Gomez said at a recent court hearing.

Supporters like Ivan Cepeda of the leftist Alternativ­e Democratic Pole contend that political incorporat­ion of the group known as the FARC is the best means of ensuring a lasting peace.

“We have had to pay a very high cost in lives, in infrastruc­ture … that today we are saving with the end of the conflict,” Cepeda said. “It’s more an investment in the democracy of Colombia.”

The FARC was formed in the early 1960s by guerrillas affiliated with Colombia’s Communist Party. Over the next 53 years the battle between the rebels, government forces and right-wing paramilita­ries claimed at least 250,000 lives, left another 60,000 people missing and displaced millions, becoming the region’s longestrun­ning conflict.

Four years of negotiatio­ns in Havana between rebel leaders and the government culminated with the signing of a peace accord in which guerillas agreed to turn over their arms, confess their crimes in a special peace tribunal that will spare most of any jail time, and turn over their war spoils as reparation to victims.

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