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WAR REPORT
The president and the rebel seeking peace in Colombia
By Florence PANOUSSIAN
Havana (AFP) Sept 24, 2015


Key points in Colombia-FARC deal on post-conflict justice
Havana (AFP) Sept 24, 2015 - The Colombian government and FARC rebels signed a breakthrough agreement Wednesday on bringing justice for crimes committed during their half-century conflict.

Here are key points of the deal:

- The creation of special courts and a Peace Tribunal to try crimes related to the conflict.

- The new courts will have jurisdiction over all participants in the conflict, including government forces.

- The goal of the courts will be to prevent impunity for abuses committed during the war, contribute to reparations for victims, punish perpetrators and uncover the truth in a complex conflict that has drawn in government forces, leftist guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries and drug traffickers.

- Once hostilities end, the government will extend an amnesty for all political and related crimes.

- Crimes against humanity, war crimes, genocide and other grave violations will be excluded from the amnesty.

- Those who admit their crimes will get reduced sentences of five to eight years in relaxed detention conditions.

- Those who admit their crimes past a given deadline will get the same sentences, but in ordinary prisons.

. Those who do not admit their crimes will face full trials and sentences of up to 20 years.

- FARC fighters can only access the special courts once they have disarmed, which must begin within 60 days of the signing of a final peace accord.

Kerry hails 'historic progress' toward Colombia-FARC peace deal
Washington (AFP) Sept 24, 2015 - The United States on Wednesday hailed a major stride made toward a peace deal in Colombia's civil war, the longest running in all of Latin America.

"The announcements made today at the peace talks in Havana represent historic progress toward a final peace agreement to end more than 50 years of armed conflict," Secretary of State John Kerry said. "Peace is now ever closer for the Colombian people and millions of conflict victims."

Kerry voiced hope that the deal would be ironed out swiftly.

"We are hopeful the parties will soon conclude a final agreement to end this terrible war. The Colombian people deserve a just and durable peace, and this will be their victory," the top US diplomat added.

Earlier in Havana, Santos said his government and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia rebels will sign a definitive peace deal within six months -- a major breakthrough.

Santos and FARC leader Timoleon "Timochenko" Jimenez presided over a ceremony where the government and rebel leaders signed a deal on justice for crimes committed during the conflict, which had been the key issue blocking progress in the negotiations.

Santos made a surprise trip to Havana, where the talks have been taking place, for the signing ceremony -- the first time he has appeared at the negotiations he set in motion and has staked his presidency on successfully concluding.

Cuba is one of the countries working as peace facilitators; the talks in the Cuban capital Havana, which began in November 2012, had stalled over the thorny question of whether guerrillas will face prison for kidnappings, use of child soldiers, cocaine trafficking and other crimes.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and Timoleon "Timochenko" Jimenez, the leader of the FARC rebels, announced a major breakthrough Wednesday in peace talks to end a conflict that has burned for half a century.

Here are profiles of the two men, who met for the first time Wednesday and shook hands at the signing of a landmark deal on bringing justice for crimes committed during the conflict.

- The president -

Juan Manuel Santos, 64, served as defense minister under hawkish president Alvaro Uribe (2002-2010), running a no-holds-barred military campaign against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

But he switched tack after his 2010 election, launching peace talks with the FARC.

That caused a bitter break with his one-time mentor Uribe, now a senator, who accused him of betraying the nation.

However, Santos staked his presidency on the peace process, winning reelection last year in a vote widely seen as a referendum on the talks.

The center-right leader campaigned on the promise to end a civil war that has killed more than 220,000 people and displaced six million across half a century.

His determination to follow the path of peace appears to be paying off.

After Wednesday's breakthrough deal was signed, Santos vowed to conclude a final peace accord "within six months."

But he is also dogged by the murders of thousands of civilians by soldiers who falsely claimed their "combat kills" were guerrillas.

The scion of a wealthy family entrenched in Colombian politics and the media, he worked in the trade and finance ministries before his stint as defense minister.

He studied at the prestigious London School of Economics and was involved in free-trade negotiations with the United States, Europe and Asia.

- The rebel -

Rodrigo Londono, alias Timoleon Jimenez, alias Timochenko, is the third commander to lead the FARC since the guerrilla group was launched in 1964.

He took over in 2011 after his predecessor, Alfonso Cano, was shot and killed by government forces in an operation ordered by Santos.

Timockenko, 56, was a protege of the FARC's founding commander, Manuel "Sureshot" Marulanda, who led the guerrilla army for more than four decades until his death of a heart attack in 2008.

The young Timochenko grew up in the same coffee-farming region as Marulanda in western Colombia, joining the Communist Youth in the 1970s and studying medicine in the Soviet Union and Cuba -- though he never graduated.

He joined the FARC when he returned to Colombia in 1979 and rose rapidly through the ranks, joining the rebels' top command at age 26.

With his thick salt-and-pepper beard and hefty paunch, Marulanda does not quite fit the image of a guerrilla fighter who lives hiding out in the mountains.

He showed up in Havana Wednesday not in combat fatigues but a black tracksuit.

Timockenko is wanted on charges including terrorism, aggravated homicide and kidnapping.

More than 100 warrants have been issued for his arrest, and he has been sentenced in absentia to more than 150 years in prison.

The United States has a $5-million reward out for his arrest.

Yet Santos's government has now twice tacitly allowed him travel to Cuba to meet with his peace negotiators.

In April 2014, Santos said he would "think twice" before ordering Timockenko killed.


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