World

'Yes to peace': Colombia, FARC rebels reach historic deal to end 5-decade war

Colombia's government and its biggest rebel group announced a deal Wednesday evening for ending their country's half-century guerrilla war, one of the world's longest-running armed conflicts. The accord must still be ratified by voters in a plebiscite.

Country must vote on accord to end conflict that has killed 220,000 people and displaced 5 million

After signing a historic peace deal in Havana, Cuba, Humberto de La Calle, right, head of Colombia's government peace negotiation team, shakes hands with Ivan Marquez, chief negotiator for FARC, while Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez applauds. (Ramon Espinosa/Associated Press)

Colombia's government and the country's biggest rebel group reached a deal Wednesday evening for ending a half-century of hostilities in what has been one of the world's longest-running armed conflicts.

The government's accord with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) must still be ratified by voters in a plebiscite in order to take effect.

But the announcement in Havana of a deal after four years of talks opens the possibility for Colombians to put behind them political bloodshed that has claimed more than 220,000 lives and driven more than 5 million people from their homes.

"I can die in peace because finally I'll see my country without violence with a future for my children," said Orlando Guevara, 57, crying as he watched the announcement on a giant TV screen with about 400 other people on a plaza in Colombia's capital. Some in the crowd waved white flags symbolizing peace and others held up the national flag.

As soon as rebel leader Ivan Marquez finished his speech, bringing an end to the televised event, the people at the plaza sang the national anthem and shouted, "Viva Colombia! Yes to peace!"

FARC rebels laugh during a break at their camp in the southern jungles of Putumayo on Aug. 16. As Colombia's conflict winds down, thousands of FARC rebels are emerging from their hideouts and preparing for a life without arms. (Fernando Vergara/Associated Press)

The accord, whose final text has yet to be published, commits Colombia's government to carrying out aggressive land reform, overhauling its anti-narcotics strategy and greatly expanding the state into traditionally neglected areas of the country.

But many sensitive details being worked out during around-the-clock sessions in recent days remain unknown and the joint statement read by the talks' Cuban and Norwegian sponsors was intended more to celebrate the conclusion of talks than offer new insights.

Negotiations began in November 2012 and were plagued by distrust built up during decades of war propaganda on both sides.

Controversial concessions to rebels

Polls say most Colombians loathe the rebel group known as the FARC and show no hesitation labeling them "narco-terrorists" for their heavy involvement in Colombia's cocaine trade, an association for which members of the group's top leadership have been indicted in the U.S. Meanwhile, the FARC held onto a Cold War view of Colombia's political and economic establishment as "oligarchs" at the service of the U.S.

The rebel army was forced to the negotiating table after a decade of heavy battlefield losses that saw a succession of top rebel commanders killed by the U.S.-backed military and its ranks thinned by half to 7,000 troops.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, an unlikely peacemaker given his role as architect of the military offensive, throughout maintained a steady pulse even as he was labeled a traitor by his conservative former allies and suffered a plunge in approval ratings.

Thousands of demonstrators take part in a protest against FARC rebels on April 6. Colombia has made some controversial concessions to the guerrillas during peace negotiations. (Jaime Saldarriaga/Reuters)

The most contentious breakthrough came in September when the president traveled to Havana to lay out with FARC commander Rodrigo Londono a framework for investigating atrocities, punishing guerrillas for involvement in those abuses and offering compensation to victims.

Opponents of Santos and some human rights groups harshly criticized a key part of that deal: guerrillas who confess their crimes won't spend any time in prison and will instead be allowed to serve out reduced sentences of no more than eight years helping rebuild communities hit by the conflict.

Another toad to swallow, as Santos calls the concessions he's had to make, will be the sight of former rebel leaders occupying seats in congress specially reserved for the FARC's still unnamed political movement. The exact number of such seats was among the last details being hammered out in marathon 18-hour sessions taking place in recent days.

"We haven't slept but it was worth the effort," said Sen. Roy Barreras, among political reinforcements sent in by Santos to work on the deal, speaking to Caracol Radio from Havana.

The announcement that talks have successfully concluded trigger a series of events, some entailing political risks.

Colombians to vote on deal

First, Santos must present the accords to congress and ask it to set a date for a plebiscite that could take place as early as next month. Details were expected when he addressed the nation in a televised appearance later Wednesday night. Polls show Colombians would likely endorse any deal in a simple yes or no vote.

But the still-unknown final accord may contain surprises and the opposition is likely to try to convert the vote into a referendum on Santos, whose approval rating plummeted to 21 per cent in May according to a Gallup poll, the lowest since he took office in 2010.

In this Sept. 23, 2015, photo, Cuban President Raul Castro, centre, stands with Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, left, and FARC Commander Timoleon Jimenez, in Havana, Cuba. (Desmond Boylan/Associated Press)

Low voter turnout is also a concern because a minimum of 13 per cent of the electorate, or about 4.4 million voters, must vote in favor for the accord to be ratified.

After the agreement is signed, the FARC will begin mobilizing its troops to 31 zones scattered across the country, and 90 days later they are supposed to begin handing their weapons over to United Nations-sponsored monitors.

Cocaine trade up for grabs

But don't expect any immediate peace dividend or security improvements in Colombia's blood-splattered countryside.

Over the last 13 months, since the FARC declared a unilateral cease-fire and the government reciprocated with a truce of its own in all but name, violence has fallen to the lowest level since the FARC was created 52 years ago by outlaw peasant groups joined by communist activists.

Only four deaths attributed to the FARC have been reported during that period and in the last 68 days the group hasn't carried out a single offensive action, according to a report last week by the Bogota-based Conflict Analysis Resource Center.

A Colombian anti-narcotics policeman stands guard after burning a cocaine lab in a rural area of Calamar in Guaviare state on Aug. 2. Analysts say that if FARC puts down arms, gangs will fight for control of the country's drug trade. (John Vizcaino/Reuters)

Analysts are concerned that as the rebels integrate into Colombian society, well-organized criminal gangs will fill the void and fight among themselves for control of the lucrative cocaine trade that kept the FARC well-armed much longer than other Latin American insurgencies.

While Colombia's homicide rate has fallen sharply over the years, it remains among the world's deadliest countries, with violence driven largely by its status as the world's top supplier of cocaine.

The much-smaller National Liberation Army will also remain active, although it's pursuing a peace deal of its own.