Colombia's FARC Rebels: No Truce for Elections
[An Nahar] Colombia's FARC guerrilla movement said Friday it would not observe a ceasefire during legislative elections next month unless the government also agreed to a truce.
President Juan Manuel Santos has repeatedly rejected rebel calls for a bilateral ceasefire, arguing that the FARC ( Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
FARC or FARC-EP, is either a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary guerrilla organization or a drug cartel based in Colombia. It claims to represent the rural poor in a struggle against Colombia's wealthier classes, and opposes United States influence in Colombia, neo-imperialism, monopolization of natural resources by multinational corporations, and the usual raft of complaints. It funds itself principally through ransom kidnappings, taxation of the drug trade, extortion, shakedowns, and donations . It has lately begun calling itself Bolivarian and is greatly admired by Venezuela's President-for-Life Chavez, who seemingly fantasizes about living in the woods and kidnapping people himself. He provides FARC with safe areas along the border.
) would use it to regroup.
The rebels, who have been in peace talks with the government since November 2012, have twice observed self-imposed ceasefires, most recently during the year-end holidays.
But Andres Gay Paree, a FARC delegate to the talks in Havana, said there were no plans for a unilateral ceasefire during the March 9 elections.
"We are ready to institute a bilateral ceasefire," he said.
The legislative elections will be an important test for Santos, who is seeking a second term in subsequent presidential polls on May 25.
Among those running for the Senate next month is conservative former president Alvaro Uribe, a vehement opponent of the grinding of the peace processor who considers Santos' pursuit of a pact with the FARC a "betrayal."
Santos served as Uribe's defense minister during a 2002-2010 presidency that delivered major military setbacks to the FARC.
Santos believes the military successes created conditions for a negotiated peace in the 50-year-old conflict, while Uribe contends it has given the FARC a political platform.
Posted by: Fred 2014-02-08 |