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What’s left to negotiate in Colombia deal with rebels?

-

The signing of a definitive ceasefire between Colombia's government and the FARC rebels caps three and a half years of negotiations in Cuba and opens the way to sealing a once-and-for-all peace deal.

The ceasefire is the fifth of six major points to be agreed upon through the negotiations.

While the outstanding point has to do with how the final peace deal should be ratified, there are other questions that have yet to be resolved:

Almost completed:

- Agricultural reform

In May 2013, the FARC struck agreement with the government over land distribution, access to loans, and setting up basic services in what used to be conflict zones.

Demonstrators march in support of Colombian farmers protesting in demand of government subsidies and...
Demonstrators march in support of Colombian farmers protesting in demand of government subsidies and greater access to land, in Medellin, Antioquia department, on August 29, 2013
Raul Arboleda, AFP/File

- Drug trafficking

Since the 1980s, drug trafficking fueled and worsened the conflict. In May 2014, the FARC reached an accord with the government to get rid of illegal coca crops in its area of influence. The authorities continue to combat narcotrafficking but also offer alternative sources of revenue to former coca farmers, and treat addiction as a public health issue.

Some big questions unresolved:

- Politics, not fighting

The FARC is to give up its weapons to become a political party. In November 2013, the rebels signed a deal giving them legal guarantees and security to participate in elections.

What remains to be done is an agreement on FARC's demand that it has lawmakers from its ranks appointed by decree.

- Victim compensation

Colombian Amanda Suarez stands next to a poster with pictures of conflict victims at the
Colombian Amanda Suarez stands next to a poster with pictures of conflict victims at the "Never Ever Hall" museum in Granada municipality, Antioquia, department, Colombia on June 22, 2016
Raul Arboleda, AFP/File

The Colombian conflict has left 260,000 dead, 45,000 missing and 6.9 million people displaced, according to official figures. In December 2015 both sides announced one of the most complex agreements in the peace talks: what compensation to give victims and what punishment for perpetrators of serious crimes.

Under the deal, special courts are to judge guerrillas and state agents implicated in crimes linked to the conflict.

But the process of naming judges for the courts has not yet been finalized.

- Life after the gun?

The ceasefire the FARC and government signed on Thursday made definitive an unofficial truce observed since July 2015, but the exact date it comes into effect still has not been given. It's the first time since the collapse of a bilateral 1984-1987 ceasefire that the FARC has committed itself to laying down arms.

The end of hostilities includes a UN-supervised disarmament of the rebels, safety guarantees for ex-fighters and a government promise to combat paramilitary armed groups that had countered the rebels.

However a clause on a "return to civilian life" underpinning the FARC's transformation to a political party is not believed to have been settled yet, according to Colombian media.

Sixth phase:

- Ratification of the accord

To work out the ins and outs of a final peace deal, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos wants a referendum. The FARC had for a long time demanded a Constituent Assembly but recently said it was open to a plebiscite. The result would go to fixing the parameters of this final step.

The signing of a definitive ceasefire between Colombia’s government and the FARC rebels caps three and a half years of negotiations in Cuba and opens the way to sealing a once-and-for-all peace deal.

The ceasefire is the fifth of six major points to be agreed upon through the negotiations.

While the outstanding point has to do with how the final peace deal should be ratified, there are other questions that have yet to be resolved:

Almost completed:

– Agricultural reform

In May 2013, the FARC struck agreement with the government over land distribution, access to loans, and setting up basic services in what used to be conflict zones.

Demonstrators march in support of Colombian farmers protesting in demand of government subsidies and...

Demonstrators march in support of Colombian farmers protesting in demand of government subsidies and greater access to land, in Medellin, Antioquia department, on August 29, 2013
Raul Arboleda, AFP/File

– Drug trafficking

Since the 1980s, drug trafficking fueled and worsened the conflict. In May 2014, the FARC reached an accord with the government to get rid of illegal coca crops in its area of influence. The authorities continue to combat narcotrafficking but also offer alternative sources of revenue to former coca farmers, and treat addiction as a public health issue.

Some big questions unresolved:

– Politics, not fighting

The FARC is to give up its weapons to become a political party. In November 2013, the rebels signed a deal giving them legal guarantees and security to participate in elections.

What remains to be done is an agreement on FARC’s demand that it has lawmakers from its ranks appointed by decree.

– Victim compensation

Colombian Amanda Suarez stands next to a poster with pictures of conflict victims at the

Colombian Amanda Suarez stands next to a poster with pictures of conflict victims at the “Never Ever Hall” museum in Granada municipality, Antioquia, department, Colombia on June 22, 2016
Raul Arboleda, AFP/File

The Colombian conflict has left 260,000 dead, 45,000 missing and 6.9 million people displaced, according to official figures. In December 2015 both sides announced one of the most complex agreements in the peace talks: what compensation to give victims and what punishment for perpetrators of serious crimes.

Under the deal, special courts are to judge guerrillas and state agents implicated in crimes linked to the conflict.

But the process of naming judges for the courts has not yet been finalized.

– Life after the gun?

The ceasefire the FARC and government signed on Thursday made definitive an unofficial truce observed since July 2015, but the exact date it comes into effect still has not been given. It’s the first time since the collapse of a bilateral 1984-1987 ceasefire that the FARC has committed itself to laying down arms.

The end of hostilities includes a UN-supervised disarmament of the rebels, safety guarantees for ex-fighters and a government promise to combat paramilitary armed groups that had countered the rebels.

However a clause on a “return to civilian life” underpinning the FARC’s transformation to a political party is not believed to have been settled yet, according to Colombian media.

Sixth phase:

– Ratification of the accord

To work out the ins and outs of a final peace deal, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos wants a referendum. The FARC had for a long time demanded a Constituent Assembly but recently said it was open to a plebiscite. The result would go to fixing the parameters of this final step.

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.

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