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Colombia's slow action on peace deal leaving 'power vacuum', UN warns
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Dec 16, 2016


Pope seeks common ground on Colombia peace deal with Santos, Uribe
Vatican City (AFP) Dec 16, 2016 - Pope Francis brought together Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and his predecessor Alvaro Uribe at the Vatican Friday, without managing to persuade them to overcome their differences over an historic peace accord with FARC rebels.

Uribe led the campaign opposing the agreement inked by Santos's government with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

The peace deal, aimed at ending a half-century conflict that has claimed more than 260,000 lives, was ratified last month after an earlier version was voted down in October.

Santos had already been set to meet the pope on Friday while on tour in Europe after receiving the Nobel Peace Prize for the deal, and Uribe joined them after a last-minute invitation.

The Argentine pope talked with the men separately for 20 minutes each before holding an audience with both that lasted 25 minutes.

The Colombian president told journalists Pope Francis had "repeated his support for the new peace agreement" and stressed it should be "implemented immediately".

But Uribe told the media that there were still problems with the deal, which he said grants impunity to rebels guilty of war crimes, giving them seats in Congress rather than sending them to prison.

"Changes were made (to the old deal), but there are certain very delicate points that the government did not want to revise," he said.

"Right now there are Colombians in prison who have committed crimes that are much less grave than those of the FARC," he added.

- 'Brick by brick' -

Francis talked to both men about the "importance of sincere dialogue between all parts of Colombian society," the Vatican said.

He added that the Roman Catholic Church in Colombia should do what it can to aid national reconciliation and teach "the lesson of forgiveness".

Uribe, a rightwing leader, spearheaded opposition to the peace deal, which was forged after nearly four years of negotiations.

After voters rejected the earlier deal by a narrow margin in an October referendum, the government and FARC renegotiated it, and had it ratified in Congress rather than risk a second referendum.

Santos described telling Uribe during their Vatican meeting that he welcomed the search for common ground on how to implement the deal.

"Peace is built -- we were talking about it with His Holiness -- like a cathedral. Brick by brick. And this demands an effort by many people over a long time.

"This is what Colombia faces, fortunately without the burden of war and armed conflict," he added.

The UN warned Friday that Colombia was moving too slowly in implementing its peace accord with leftist FARC rebels, which resulted in a "power vacuum" that could be exploited by gangs.

Aimed at ending five decades of conflict, the November 24 pact has huge potential for improving human rights in Colombia, the UN rights office said.

But, its spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani warned, "practical aspects of the demobilisation and disarming of FARC members set out in the accord are not being prioritised."

The deal calls for FARC guerrillas to gather in 27 zones where they will disarm and demobilise.

"But two weeks into the demobilisation process, none of these zones are equipped to adequately receive them," she told reporters in Geneva.

She pointed to limited access to safe drinking water, food, health services and electricity in the zones.

"International experience shows that the initial days of demobilisation are the most critical in ensuring combatants do not abandon the peace process," she said.

FARC members have been gathering in so-called pre-concentration points prior to disarming and demobilising, but these points are plagued by a "similar lack of preparation and facilities," as well as a lack of concrete security measures, Shamdasani said.

"As FARC guerrillas leave areas that are traditionally under their control, the state has not yet fully stepped in, leaving a power vacuum," she said.

"Armed and criminal groups are vying for the control of illegal economic activities in these areas."

She noted that her office had documented 61 killings in Colombia, mainly of human rights activists and social leaders in rural areas.

More than a third of the killings occurred after the first peace deal was signed in late September.

Considering the large number of challenges facing the implementation of the ambitious peace agreement, the UN urged the Colombian government to appoint a crisis manager with executive authority to take on the practical problems.

"We are also calling for immediate, determined and visible state action on the ground to provide security and basic services, and to begin implementing all aspects of the accord to ensure that it lives up to the promise of peace for Colombia," Shamdasani said.

Colombian president receives 'Catholic Nobel' for FARC deal
Rome (AFP) Dec 17, 2016 - Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos on Saturday received the Lampara peace prize, the "Catholic Nobel", for his efforts to reach a deal with his country's Marxist FARC rebels.

The award, handed over in the Italian city of Assisi, comes a week after Santos received the actual Nobel Peace Prize at a ceremony in Oslo, in recognition of his work to end the half-century conflict that has claimed more than 260,000 lives.

"I wanted to be an instrument of peace for my country, and there have been many instruments of peace among those who have joined me in this work," he said after receiving the lamp of Saint Francis, a symbol of peace for Roman Catholics.

"Today I want to ask Saint Francis to continue to inspire us so that this peace we have agreed can be felt in every Colombian town, village and family."

His visit to Assisi came a day after Pope Francis brought him together with his predecessor as Colombian president, Alvaro Uribe, at the Vatican.

Uribe led opposition to the agreement with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), ratified last month after an earlier version was voted down in a referendum in October.

The former president and his allies argue the deal grants impunity to rebels guilty of war crimes, giving them seats in parliament instead of sending them to prison.

After voters rejected the initial deal by a narrow margin, the government and FARC renegotiated it, deciding to have it ratified in Congress rather than risk a second referendum.


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