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WAR REPORT
Colombian army denies FARC claim of eight dead
by Staff Writers
Bogota (AFP) Jan 14, 2015


FARC says will stick to Colombia truce
Bogota (AFP) Jan 13, 2015 - A top FARC negotiator Tuesday reaffirmed the Colombian rebel group's intention to observe a unilateral ceasefire so long as its forces do not come under attack.

In comments published in the newspaper El Espectator, Pastor Alape said the indefinite ceasefire that the FARC declared on December 20 was "a serious step toward the agreement of an armistice."

"The unilateral and indefinite ceasefire will remain in place as long as the military does not attack the FARC's units," said Alape, whose real name is Felix Antonio Munoz.

The FARC charged in a statement at the end of last week that the military was stepping up its pressure on the guerrilla units.

Colombia's President Juan Manuel Santos has acknowledged that the FARC has abided by the ceasefire.

But he has refused to agree to a ceasefire on the part of the government until a comprehensive peace agreement has been reached.

The government and the FARC have been negotiating for more than two years in Havana to bring an end to the group's 50-year-old insurgency, but key issues remain unresolved, including disarmament and how any agreement should be ratified.

More than 220,000 people have died in the conflict, Latin America's longest.

Colombia's military denied a claim by the FARC rebel group that eight soldiers were killed this week in a counter-insurgency operation.

Military sources disclosed, however, that a soldier was killed in a separate engagement on January 9 in the southern department of Caqueta.

The soldier, 23-year-old Edward Valsco Medina, was believed to be the first combat death since the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) unilaterally declared a ceasefire on December 20.

The Bogota government and the FARC have been in peace talks for more than two years, aimed at putting an end to the oldest leftist insurgency in Latin America.

"It's not true that 8 of our soldiers have been assassinated by #Farc in #Meta," the army tweeted.

The rebel group said eight soldiers were killed in central Meta province earlier this week after one of its units came under mortar and air attack.

"As a result of the defensive response, we lament that eight military personnel lost their lives, unnecessarily," it said in a statement from Havana, where peace talks are underway.

The rebels said a Colombian soldier also was wounded during a separate counter-insurgency operation in the northern Antioquia and Uraba regions.

"These are all casualties that could have been avoided if the government had been less small-minded," it said.

The FARC urged the government to stop "these senseless actions in the midst of a peace process, because they could provoke the end of the unilateral ceasefire and disturb the climate of confidence that should prevail at the negotiating table."

The rebel group unilaterally declared an indefinite ceasefire on December 20, a stance it reaffirmed on Tuesday.

President Juan Manuel Santos has refused to commit to a truce until the FARC signs onto a comprehensive peace agreement.

Peace talks have been taking place in Havana for more than two years, and remain a high priority for Santos, who has made ending the 50-year-old insurgency the central goal of his presidency.

More than 220,000 people have lost their lives in the conflict.

The peace talks have been in recess since December, but they are scheduled to resume January 18 with an experts-level meeting, followed by the start of the next cycle of negotiations on January 26.


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Colombia's second largest leftist guerrilla group announced Wednesday it is prepared to hold formal peace negotiations with the government aimed at ending a half century old insurgency. The National Liberation Front, or ELN by its Spanish acronym, would be following in the footsteps of the larger Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which has been in peace talks with the government for mo ... read more


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