Yahoo – AFP, Alexander Grosbois in Havana with Alina Dieste in Bogota, June 23, 2016
Havana
(AFP) - The Colombian government and the FARC rebel force signed a ceasefire
and disarmament agreement Thursday, one of the last steps toward ending a
half-century conflict that has killed hundreds of thousands of people.
The deal
puts a definitive end to fighting in Latin America's longest civil war, which
has torn the country apart with shootings and bombardments in its coca-rich
jungles and hills.
President
Juan Manuel Santos and FARC leader Timoleon Jimenez shook hands and smiled
after negotiators signed the deal at a ceremony in Cuba.
The deal
establishes "a bilateral ceasefire and end to hostilities and the
definitive laying down of arms," according to the text.
"This
is a historic day for our country," Santos said in a speech to assembled
leaders including UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
"After
more than 50 years of confrontations, deaths, attacks and pain, we have put a
final end to the armed conflict with the FARC."
Disarmament
will begin after the signing of a full final peace agreement, expected within
weeks.
Thursday's
agreements "leave us on the verge of completing a final accord relatively
soon," Jimenez said.
The final
deal "will allow us to return at last to legal political activity through
peaceful and democratic means," he added.
![]() |
The state
of peace negotiations between the Colombian government
and FARC rebels (AFP
Photo/Tatiana Magarinos, Gustavo Izus)
|
Tears of
joy
In the
Colombian capital Bogota, crowds gathered to watch the announcement on a big
screen.
One man,
Camilo Gonzalez, was moved to tears.
"It
has been a tragic journey. Millions of victims, people displaced, fighting,
broken dreams," he said.
"But I
think now we have reached a moment of hope."
Under the
agreement, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) must hand over its
weapons to United Nations monitors within six months.
The FARC's
members -- an estimated 7,000 or so -- will gather in "normalization
zones" for a demobilization process.
The sides
also agreed to government action against "criminal organizations"
blamed for fueling the conflict.
The United
States congratulated Colombia. "We will stand ready to help the Colombian
people as they work toward a just and lasting peace," said US National
Security Advisor Susan Rice.
The
European Union's foreign representative Federica Mogherini in a statement
called it a "a turning point in the Colombian peace process."
"Now
all efforts must be devoted to reaching a final comprehensive agreement that
will pave the way to durable peace in the country" and justice for
victims, she said.
260,000 dead
![]() |
Colombians
celebrate in downtown Bogota as they watch on a giant screen
the signing of the
ceasefire in Havana, on June 23, 2016 (AFP Photo/
Guillermo Legaria)
|
260,000 dead
The
Colombian conflict started in the 1960s as a rural uprising for land rights
that spawned the communist FARC.
The
conflict has drawn in various leftist rebel groups, right-wing paramilitaries
and drug gangs over the decades.
It has left
260,000 people dead, 45,000 missing and nearly seven million displaced,
according to official figures.
Human
rights groups say atrocities have been committed on all sides. Many families
are still searching for missing loved ones.
Thursday's
deal resolves one of the final points in peace talks between the government and
the FARC, the country's largest rebel group.
However,
the means of implementing the final peace deal remain to be settled after
three-and-a-half years of negotiations.
The two
sides said they would wait for the courts to rule on whether a referendum can
be held to endorse the accord, and would accept the court's decision.
Although
peace with the FARC would virtually end the conflict, other armed groups are
still operating in Colombia.
A bid to
hold peace talks between the government and the second-biggest rebel group, the
leftist National Liberation Army (ELN), has stumbled because of its alleged
kidnappings.
"The
activity of the ELN above all and the criminal gangs means that we cannot yet
talk of a complete end to the armed conflict," said Kyle Johnson, Colombia
analyst for the International Crisis Group.
"It
will be the end of Colombia's biggest armed conflict, but not all of
them."



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