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“Thisclose” to Peace in Colombia

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More than 50 years of war between the Colombian government and the guerrilla forces of the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia; “Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia”) have seemingly come to a close. A cease-fire had been firmly in place since 2015, and on August 24, 2016, a final peace agreement was reached between the government and the FARC that will be put before the Colombian people in a nonbinding plebiscite on October 2.

The final agreement came about after the ironing out of a few remaining details, though the biggest points of contention between the government and the rebels had already been painstakingly worked through during some four years of peace negotiations conducted mostly in Havana. In June 2016 Colombian Pres. Juan Manuel Santos traveled to the Cuban capital to join the FARC’s leader, Rodrigo Londoño (“Timochenko”), in signing a permanent cease-fire agreement. That agreement addressed the contentious issue of the decommissioning of FARC fighters by specifying that they would turn in their weapons under UN monitoring within 180 days of the final peace treaty’s signing. Another hot-button issue, the trials and potential punishment of FARC guerrillas, was resolved by mandating the creation of transitional justice tribunals, which will have the option of sentencing the convicted to community service or confinement in rehabilitation zones rather than prison.

Colombia has been afflicted by widespread fighting and violence for decades, much of it related to illicit drug trafficking, especially the rise of the Medellín drug cartel headed by Pablo Escobar. In pursuing a revolutionary agenda centered on redressing Colombia’s inequitable land distribution, the FARC too has engaged in drug trafficking, as well as in kidnapping. In addition to combating the military, the FARC also has battled right-wing paramilitary forces that have defended the interests of large property owners. Both the paramilitary groups and the FARC committed atrocities during the long fight.

During his tenure as president, Santos’s predecessor, Álvaro Uribe Vélez, escalated and made gains in the battle against the FARC. Santos, who had been Uribe’s minister of defense from 2006 to 2009, surprised observers by beginning peace talks with the FARC in Norway in 2011. As those talks began to reach fruition, Uribe became a vocal hawkish critic of Santos’s conciliatory efforts. Meanwhile, even as the realization of a permanent peace between the government and the FARC draws near, a smaller rebel group, the National Liberation Army (Ejército de Liberación Nacional; ELN), continues its armed struggle against the government.