After more than five decades of conflict,
more than four years of negotiations in Cuba and two signing ceremonies,
Colombia's congress formally ratified a peace agreement allowing left wing
rebels of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) to enter politics.
Colombia´s president Juan Manuel
Santos and rebel leader Rodrigo Londoño signed the revised accord last week in
a ceremony in Bogota. The new agreement, that ends Latin America's longest insurgency,
was put together in just over a month after the original pact - which allowed
the rebels to hold public office and skip jail - was unexpectedly defeated in a
referéndum on 2nd of October. The opposition with its leader and former
president of Colombia (2002 - 2010) Alvaro Uribe argued that the deal offered
too many concessions to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC,
and did not serve as a deterrent for other groups involved in crime.
Santos, who won the Nobel Peace
Prize 2016 for his peace efforts, wants to get the deal implemented as quickly
as possible to maintain the ceasefire deal with the FARC. The peace deal will
formally end the continents´s longest-running conflict that has killed more
than 220,000 and displaced millions of people.
We will keep you updated about
the implementation process.
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