Yahoo –AFP, Alina Dieste with Hector Velasco in Havana, August 29, 2016
Bogota
(AFP) - A historic ceasefire came into effect in Colombia Monday, ending a
52-year war between the FARC rebels and the government that claimed more than
250,000 lives.
The full
ceasefire ordered by President Juan Manuel Santos and the head of the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Timoleon Jimenez, began at
midnight (0500 GMT Monday).
"This
August 29 a new phase of history begins for Colombia. We silenced the guns. THE
WAR WITH THE FARC IS OVER!" Santos wrote on Twitter one minute after
midnight.
A message
from the official FARC account at the same time was more restrained: "From
this moment on the bilateral and definitive ceasefire begins."
In a
statement to reporters in Cuba, where peace talks were held, Jimenez said he
had ordered all commanders and units "and each one of our combatants to
definitively cease fire and hostilities against the Colombian state."
Santos had
issued similar orders Thursday to the Colombian military.
The
ceasefire is the first in which both sides are committed to a definite end to
the fighting.
"The
ceasefire is really one more seal on the end of the conflict. It is the test of
fire," said Carlos Alfonso Velazquez, a security expert at the University
of La Sabana.
Peace
referendum
The
conflict began in 1964 with the launch of the FARC, a Marxist guerrilla group
born out of a peasant uprising. It has left 260,000 dead, 45,000 missing and
6.9 million uprooted from their homes.
To end the
war with the FARC for good, Colombians must now vote in an October 2 referendum
on the peace accord reached in Havana after nearly four years of talks.
Santos said
the exact question that will be put to voters in the referendum would be
announced "in the coming days."
"We
are on the verge of perhaps the most important political decision of our
lives," he said in a speech on Saturday.
Opinion
polls show Colombians are divided ahead of the referendum.
Santos's
top rival, former president Alvaro Uribe, is leading a campaign to vote
"no" to the peace deal. He says a special justice system envisaged
for crimes committed during the conflict would give FARC fighters impunity.
Opponents
question the FARC's commitment to peace.
"I
don't think we can believe them," said Felipe Giraldo, a 25-year-old
unemployed man in Bogota.
Others have
a high personal stake in the vote.
Adelaida
Bermudez, 50, hopes it will bring home her daughter, a FARC fighter for the
past nine years.
"I
hope we'll have peace... so the children come home," she said in Gaitania,
in the central region where the FARC was born.
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The FARC
rebel movement (AFP Photo/Gustavo IZUS)
|
Demobilization
Santos and
Jimenez are due to sign the peace agreement sometime between September 20 and
30 -- possibly at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, said Foreign
Minister Maria Angela Holguin.
The end of
hostilities will be followed by a six-month demobilization process.
Starting
Monday, the FARC's estimated 7,500 fighters will head to collection points to
surrender their weapons under UN supervision.
Guerrillas
who refuse to demobilize and disarm "will be pursued with all the strength
of the state forces," Santos told El Espectador newspaper.
Before the
demobilization, the FARC will convene its leaders and troops one last time
before transforming into "a legal political movement," according to a
statement published on Saturday.
Reconciliation
The
territorial and ideological conflict has drawn in various left- and right-wing
armed groups and gangs.
Efforts to
launch peace talks with a smaller rebel group, the National Liberation Army
(ELN), have yet to bear fruit.
But with
the FARC ordering a ceasefire, the conflict appears to be reaching an end.
"We
wish to express our clear and definite will for reconciliation," said
Jimenez, known by the nom de guerre Timochenko, in Havana.
"Rivalries
and resentment must remain in the past. Today more than ever we regret that so
much death and pain has been caused by the war. Today more than ever we wish to
embrace (the military and police) as compatriots and start to work together for
a new Colombia."




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