The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What are Colombia’s EX-FARC splinter groups?

-

The Biden administra­tion revoked the terrorist designatio­n of Colombia’s former FARC guerrilla army Tuesday, five years after the rebel group signed a peace deal with the government. However, it imposed the same designatio­n on two splinter groups that are still fighting in remote pockets of the South American country.

The FARC holdouts newly designated by the United States as foreign terrorist organizati­ons are the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia-people’s Army — known by the Spanish acronym of FARC-EP — and Segunda Marquetali­a.

Here are more details on these newly designated terrorist groups:

How did the splinter groups arise?

After five decades of internal conflict that killed an estimated 26,000 people and forced more than 6 million to flee their homes, the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia signed a peace deal in which 13,000 fighters gave up their weapons in exchange for numerous concession­s from the government, including developmen­t programs for rural areas and the opportunit­y for former guerrilla leaders to participat­e in local politics and avoid time in prison.

But a group of about 1,000 fighters led by commander Néstor Gregorio Vera refused to lay down their weapons and continued to conduct attacks and kidnapping­s in southeaste­rn Colombia. These fighters now use the acronym FARC-EP.

In 2019, three years after the peace deal was signed, former FARC commander Iván Márquez announced he would be taking up arms again in a video shot at an undisclose­d location, creating the Segunda Marquetali­a group.

Márquez, whose real name is Luciano Marin, was the FARC’S lead negotiator during peace talks with the government. He accused the Colombian government of not keeping its promises and of failing to stop the murders of dozens of former FARC fighters. When Márquez announced his return to arms, the former FARC commander and some of his close associates were under investigat­ion for drug traffickin­g in Colombia and the United States.

How large are these holdouts, and how do they operate?

The FARC splinter groups are fragmented and lack a central command structure. Security analysts in Colombia also say they are not ideologica­lly oriented and are mainly focused on controllin­g drug traffickin­g routes, illegal mines and other illicit economies.

A report published in September by the Institute for Peace and Developmen­t Studies, a Colombian research group, estimates the splinter groups have around 5,000 members, mostly new recruits, though there are also hundreds of former FARC fighters in their ranks.

The Colombian government says the FARC-EP and Segunda Marquetali­a have assassinat­ed human rights leaders, as well as dozens of former fighters who gave up their weapons during the 2016 peace deal. Colombian officials also say these splinter groups were behind a recent attempt to assassinat­e President Iván Duque in northeaste­rn Colombia.

What happens with a terrorist organizati­on designatio­n?

Members of Segunda Marquetali­a and FARC-EP cannot hold accounts in U.S. banks or receive any kind of support from the U.S. government or its contractor­s, and any private organizati­on that does business with them also risks being sanctioned. Being designated as terrorist groups could also make these organizati­ons a priority for the U.S. military.

What happened with the original FARC group?

The group formerly known as FARC is now a political party in Colombia called the Common People’s Party, which has 10 seats in the nation’s congress. After being removed from the U.S. terrorist list, the group’s members will be able to participat­e in U.S. funded activities such as programs to remove land mines in Colombia’s countrysid­e or rural developmen­t programs that benefit farmers in Colombia.

The State Department said removing FARC’S terrorist designatio­n will facilitate peace building efforts in Colombia and work with former combatants, but it also pointed out that former FARC leaders can still face charges in the United States for drug traffickin­g and other crimes.

 ?? FERNANDO VERGARA/AP 2020 ?? Rodrigo Granda (right), an ex-rebel leader and member of the FARC political party, greets Rocio Lopez, sister of two kidnap victims eventually freed, at a 2020 event where EX-FARC members apologized to locals for abductions near Villavicen­cio, Colombia.
FERNANDO VERGARA/AP 2020 Rodrigo Granda (right), an ex-rebel leader and member of the FARC political party, greets Rocio Lopez, sister of two kidnap victims eventually freed, at a 2020 event where EX-FARC members apologized to locals for abductions near Villavicen­cio, Colombia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States