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Judi Lynn

(160,630 posts)
Tue Oct 4, 2016, 08:36 PM Oct 2016

Colombia: Farc willing to secure peace ‘the hard way’

Colombia: Farc willing to secure peace ‘the hard way’

Oct Wednesday 5th 2016
posted by James Tweedie in World

Urgent call for democratic assembly to include rebel groups

A FORMER peace envoy has backed Colombia’s leftist rebels’ call for a constituent assembly to rescue the peace deal narrowly rejected in Sunday’s referendum.

In the aftermath of the disappointing result, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) said there was an “urgent” need for a “large and democratic” constituent assembly, including the other rebel groups: the National Liberation Army (ELN) and the Popular Liberation Army (EPL).

It criticised President Juan Manuel Santos for imposing the peace deal the “easy way” by means of a referendum which then led to Sunday’s “crucial electoral and political setback.”

The Farc has concluded that the peace accord, the result of four years of painstaking negotiations in the Cuban capital Havana, must be implemented the “hard way,” through an assembly. But Farc commander Timoleon Jimenez, known by his nom-de-guerre Timochenko, said the the group was open to reviewing the accord.

More:
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-6bbd-Colombia-Farc-willing-to-secure-peace-the-hard-way#.V_RKg0kVCbw

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Colombia: Farc willing to secure peace ‘the hard way’ (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2016 OP
Did Human Rights Watch Sabotage Colombia’s Peace Agreement? Judi Lynn Oct 2016 #1

Judi Lynn

(160,630 posts)
1. Did Human Rights Watch Sabotage Colombia’s Peace Agreement?
Wed Oct 5, 2016, 06:33 AM
Oct 2016

Did Human Rights Watch Sabotage Colombia’s Peace Agreement?

Like the country’s far right, HRW wanted to send human-rights violators to prison more than it wanted to end the war.

By Greg Grandin
October 3, 2016



Supporters of the peace accord between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, ( FARC) watch pensively as the results of the referendum on whether to support the deal appear on a giant screen, Bogotá, Colombia, October 2, 2016. (AP Photo / Ariana Cubillos)

. . .

It’s a heartbreaking disaster for the long, intricate peace process, which sought to put an end to Colombia’s more than five-decade-long civil war. That war has claimed hundreds and hundreds of thousands of lives and has displaced millions upon millions of people. The peace deal, which was worked out during years of negotiations, mostly in Havana, was more aspirational than binding, offering hope that one of the world’s longest-running conflicts would come to an end. Now, that deal is in “tatters.” But keep in mind that “no” won with a sliver of a voting majority (less than 1 percent) of a minority (of eligible voters), with turnout low due to, in many precincts, extreme tropical rain, mostly in coastal departments where “yes” won handily.

. . .

According to The New York Times, the government and FARC have already announced that they would send diplomats to Havana to begin discussing how to salvage the peace. The FARC responded to the vote by announcing that they remained committed to peace; indeed, the UN has already started disarming the guerrillas. Santos stated that the cease-fire will hold, and the historian Robert Karl, who just wrote a terrific “centuries long history behind Colombia’s peace agreement with the FARC” in The Washington Post, tells me that Santos, as president, has “a good deal of discretionary power” over the military, so let’s hope Santos can keep the security forces on a leash. What Washington, who has spent billions on this war (for the lethal effects of Plan Colombia, see these very useful charts by the Latin American Working Group), will do is unclear. As of early morning Monday, the State Department hasn’t commented.

 “No” won because the right wing, led by former President Álvaro Uribe, was able to turn a vote that was supposed to be on peace into a vote on the FARC. The geographic breakdown of the referendum indicates that “no” won in areas where Uribe and his political party have their support. Take a look especially at the department of Antioquia, where Uribe got his political start as a champion of paramilitary death squads. Sixty-two percent of Antioquia’s voters cast “no.” In the department’s capital, Medellín, a city that has been sold in the United States as a neoliberal success story—Modern! Urbane! Fun! Come visit!—63 percent of voters said “no” (for Medellín’s neoliberal “makeover,” see this essay by Forrest Hylton).

 Uribe served as president from 2002 to 2010. He is best thought of as a Colombian Andrew Jackson, riding to the top office of his country on the wings of mass murder, rural ressentiment, and financial speculation. As an ex-president, he has been toxic, doing everything he could to keep the war going.

More:
https://www.thenation.com/article/did-human-rights-watch-sabotage-colombias-peace-agreement/

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