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Colombia ceasefire 'will not stop govt's fight against crime'

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos ordered a definitive ceasefire with the Marxist guerrillas of the FARC from Monday

Photo credit: Wikipedia

Photo credit: Wikipedia

AFPPTI Bogota
Colombia's defense minister has insisted the historic ceasefire with Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC) — Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia in english — rebels will not end the country's commitment to fight crime, as a judge has issued arrest warrants for leaders of another group also pushing for a peace deal.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos ordered a definitive ceasefire with the Marxist guerrillas of the FARC from Monday, after the two sides reached a landmark deal to end their half-a-century conflict that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and forced millions to flee their homes.

That announcement came after Colombian and the FARC negotiators presented a 297-page peace accord Wednesday following nearly four years of arduous negotiations in Cuba.
 
A smaller Colombian leftist rebel group, the National Liberation Army (ELN), is hoping to reach a similar peace deal, but on Friday a judge ordered the arrest of the its top leaders for crimes that include their role in the destruction of oil pipelines.

"The charges against members of the ELN's Central Command include the use of methods of illicit warfare, destruction of the environment and homicide," a Bogota judge said in a statement.

The attorney general's office has accused the rebel group of being behind attacks on Colombia's oil infrastructure between 2011 and 2016, especially targeting the 780-kilometer Cano Limon-Covenas pipeline.

The pipeline attacks resulted in the loss of at least 3.5 billion barrels of crude worth $1.7 billion, as well as cleanup and environmental damage of some $25 billion, according to prosecutors.

In March, Colombia and the ELN announced moves to begin formal peace, but the rebels have yet to meet the government's precondition of releasing all of their hostages and stop all kidnapping.

Soldiers and police will continue to combat kidnapping, extortion, drug trafficking, smuggling, illegal mining and human trafficking even after the ceasefire officially begins with the FARC from Monday, Defense Minister Luis Carlos Villegas said on Friday.

"We are in a ceasefire with the FARC, but will not cease persecuting crime," he said.

"We hope that this component of the ceasefire with the FARC, concerning criminal activity, will be fully implemented," he said.

Groups of FARC rebels have been involved in all of those crimes in the past, and with peace some former guerrillas could become full-time criminals.

There is a precedent: criminal groups emerged when right-wing paramilitary death squads disbanded during the 2002-2010 presidency of Santos's predecessor, Alvaro Uribe.

The fate of the FARC-government peace accord now comes down to a decisive yes-or-no vote on October 2.

Santos, who has staked his legacy on the peace process, faces a tough political battle to win the referendum.

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First Published: Aug 27 2016 | 4:22 PM IST

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