VENEZUELA/FILE: A Colombian intelligence source says the Colombian government has agreed to hold peace talks with the nation's largest rebel group
Record ID:
349588
VENEZUELA/FILE: A Colombian intelligence source says the Colombian government has agreed to hold peace talks with the nation's largest rebel group
- Title: VENEZUELA/FILE: A Colombian intelligence source says the Colombian government has agreed to hold peace talks with the nation's largest rebel group
- Date: 27th August 2012
- Summary: SAN VICENTE DEL CAGUAN, COLOMBIA (FILE) (ORIGINALLY 4:3) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF GOVERNMENT COMMISSION AT NEGOTIATING TABLE WITH DELEGATES FROM THE FARC REBEL IN DEMILITARISED ZONE PASTRANA AND MARULANDA ENTERING MEETING VARIOUS OF PASTRANA AND MARULANDA SIGNING ACCORD POLICE AND REBELS DURING MEETING MARULANDA SIGNING ACCORD
- Embargoed: 11th September 2012 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Colombia
- Country: Colombia
- Topics: Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA2YRLJ0MQYDKVUZ85442NRUFHT
- Story Text: Colombia's government will soon begin talks that could lead to formal negotiations for peace with the country's biggest guerrilla group, known as the FARC, according to a Colombian intelligence source.
As part of the deal to hold talks, the government has agreed that leaders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia would not be extradited to another country to stand trial, he said.
One aide at President Juan Manuel Santos' office has flatly denied that any talks are taking place, but a second aide said only that any official word on peace dealings would come from Santos himself.
Details of the accord are still being worked out, but the negotiations could take place in Cuba or in Norway, the source said.
U.S. President Barack Obama is aware of the process and is in agreement, the source told Reuters.
First word of the talks came from Caracas-based network Telesur.
"The process began in May when secret talks began in Havana with the presence of the governments of Venezuela, Cuba and Norway. The formal talks are set to be held in October in Oslo. There, the delegates from the government and the guerrilla will make their way back to Havana to sit and negotiate with the goal of not leaving the table until they agree on a peace accord that will put to an end more than 50 years of armed conflict in this South American nation," announced Jorge Botero, Telesur's Director of Information.
News of the peace talks is likely to anger Santos' predecessor Alvaro Uribe who has criticized any idea of talks with the rebels and has slammed Santos for wanting "peace at any cost."
The FARC, which calls itself "the people's army" defending peasant rights, has battled about a dozen administrations since appearing in 1964, when its founder Manuel Marulanda and 48 rebels fought off thousands of troops in jungle hide-outs.
The most high-profile attempt at peace occurred from 1999 to 2002 when then-President Andres Pastrana and government representatives had a series of meetings with Marulanda and FARC representatives. The talks, however, ultimately failed.
The group has faced its toughest defeats in recent years as U.S.-trained special forces use sophisticated technology and spy networks to track the leaders.
The FARC's string of defeats began in 2008 with a cross-border military raid into Ecuador that killed Raul Reyes, its second in command. Marulanda died of a heart attack weeks later and was replaced by Alfonso Cano, who was later killed too.
The drug-funded group is led by Timoleon Jimenez, known by his war alias "Timochenko." - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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