Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

FARC rebels look to New Year to consolidate peace

-

Like many Colombians, Johana Martinez and Fabio Grinon are hoping peace will finally take hold in 2017. But for the couple -- both FARC rebels -- it will mean an unfamiliar civilian life with their son.

"We are so happy to have him here with us. And that he can feel he still has parents, and that we can share with him," Fabio said as the boy about 12 paid a visit to the FARC 34th Front camp in the jungles of Uraba, Antioquia.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) is now starting to implement its peace deal with President Juan Manuel Santos's government.

For the boy, smiling between his parents, the family time was anything but easy: his grandfather brought him from Medellin, where he lives to the middle of a jungle camp of 130 guerrilla troops.

The location is so remote that just the last part of the journey was a four-hour trip by speedboat.

"We all want peace. Nobody wants war," Johana said, stressing that she and her husband want "brothers to stop killing brothers" as they did for more than five decades.

After the peace deal was signed in November, the FARC agreed to disarm. Over the next six months, they will be gathering in demobilization zones to hand in their weapons with UN supervision.

The five-decade conflict has killed more than 260,000 people, left 45,000 missing and forced nearly seven million to flee their homes.

After voters rejected an earlier peace deal by a narrow margin, the government and the FARC renegotiated it, deciding to have it ratified in Congress rather than risk a second referendum.

The Colombian government is still seeking to salvage talks with the country's second-largest rebel group, the National Liberation Army (ELN). The process has stumbled over the issue of hostages and prisoners.

Both leftist guerrilla armies launched a war against the government in the 1960s. Authorities estimate the ELN has 1,500 fighters, mostly in remote rural areas.

The ELN meanwhile freed businessman Octavio Figueroa. He had been held since March.

It was not immediately clear if the release would breathe new life into ELN-government talks.

Like many Colombians, Johana Martinez and Fabio Grinon are hoping peace will finally take hold in 2017. But for the couple — both FARC rebels — it will mean an unfamiliar civilian life with their son.

“We are so happy to have him here with us. And that he can feel he still has parents, and that we can share with him,” Fabio said as the boy about 12 paid a visit to the FARC 34th Front camp in the jungles of Uraba, Antioquia.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) is now starting to implement its peace deal with President Juan Manuel Santos’s government.

For the boy, smiling between his parents, the family time was anything but easy: his grandfather brought him from Medellin, where he lives to the middle of a jungle camp of 130 guerrilla troops.

The location is so remote that just the last part of the journey was a four-hour trip by speedboat.

“We all want peace. Nobody wants war,” Johana said, stressing that she and her husband want “brothers to stop killing brothers” as they did for more than five decades.

After the peace deal was signed in November, the FARC agreed to disarm. Over the next six months, they will be gathering in demobilization zones to hand in their weapons with UN supervision.

The five-decade conflict has killed more than 260,000 people, left 45,000 missing and forced nearly seven million to flee their homes.

After voters rejected an earlier peace deal by a narrow margin, the government and the FARC renegotiated it, deciding to have it ratified in Congress rather than risk a second referendum.

The Colombian government is still seeking to salvage talks with the country’s second-largest rebel group, the National Liberation Army (ELN). The process has stumbled over the issue of hostages and prisoners.

Both leftist guerrilla armies launched a war against the government in the 1960s. Authorities estimate the ELN has 1,500 fighters, mostly in remote rural areas.

The ELN meanwhile freed businessman Octavio Figueroa. He had been held since March.

It was not immediately clear if the release would breathe new life into ELN-government talks.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

An Iranian military truck carries a Sayad 4-B missile past a portrait of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during a military parade on April...

World

Tycoon Morris Chang received one of Taiwan's highest medals of honour to recognise his achievements as the founder of semiconductor giant TSMC - Copyright...

Business

Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg contends freshly released Meta AI is the most intelligent digital assistant people can freely use - Copyright AFP...

Tech & Science

Don’t be too surprised to see betting agencies getting involved in questions like this: “Would you like to make billions on new tech?” is...