Colombia government announces peace talks (AP) Updated: 2005-12-22 08:57
Colombia's government and the nation's second-largest rebel group ended
nearly a week of cordial talks in Cuba on Wednesday with an agreement to set an
agenda for formal peace negotiations, a move both sides called significant.
"I think this shows the seriousness with which these conversations have moved
forward," said Colombian peace commissioner Luis Carlos Restrepo, the
government's envoy, as the discussions wrapped up in Havana. "This commits us as
the government to continue moving ahead."
Restrepo said that just months ago, few in Colombia believed a genuine peace
process with the National Liberation Army would be possible. The fact that both
sides have committed to more face-to-face meetings in Havana at the end of
January was "transcendental," he said.
The peace commissioner attributed the success to the "cordial" and
"respectful" tone of the talks, which opened Friday.
Antonio Garcia, the military chief of the rebel group known as the ELN, said
his group was "pleased with this first step. This recognizes years of work, and
could show a change in the path taken by Colombia."
National Liberation Army, ELN,
representatives, Antonio Garcia, left, and Francisco Galan speak to the
media during a press conference in Havana,Cuba, Wednesday,Dec.21, 2005.
[AP] | Colombia's triangular conflict involving
government troops, leftist rebels and right-wing paramilitary fighters kills
more than 3,000 people each year, most of them civilians.
Many Colombians are clamoring for peace ahead of elections next year in which
President Alvaro Uribe is up for re-election. Uribe has led a three-year
military offensive against rebel forces since taking office, but has recently
softened his approach after brokering a peace deal with the country's main
paramilitary group.
The current talks with the ELN mark the Uribe administration's first formal
negotiations with insurgents.
Several informal talks between the Colombian government and the ELN have
failed since 1998. When Cuba last hosted Colombia's talks with the ELN in 2002,
then-President Andres Pastrana pulled out, saying the rebel group was not
interested in peace.
The latest talks aimed at ending part of Colombia's four-decade conflict
remain in an introductory stage, but the meetings between Garcia and Restrepo
laid a groundwork of mutual trust that will help future encounters, observers
said.
"We salute the atmosphere in which both sides had an attitude of creating
confidence and understanding," said Thomas Kupfer, Switzerland's ambassador to
Colombia who came to Havana to help facilitate the talks along with envoys from
Spain and Norway.
Both parties declined to provide details of the issues that would be tackled
in the agenda-setting meetings. But Garcia said the discussion of deep social
and economic changes in Colombia would have to be central to any peace process,
and it was assumed the government would demand some sort of cease-fire agreement
from the rebels.
ELN rebels have continued fighting at home during talks in communist-run
Cuba. In a show of strength, they joined fighters from two other rebel armies in
an attack on a western Colombian village Saturday, killing at least eight police
officers and kidnapping several others.
The ELN has seen its forces dwindle to fewer than 3,500 fighters after
Uribe's military offensive. But Garcia said Wednesday the rebel group's fight
for social justice represents the desires of most Colombians.
"The ELN exists way beyond its armed men," he said.
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