WAR Colombians reject deal to end 52-year FARC rebel war

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
WOW!........

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-colombia-peace-idUSKCN12204M

World News | Mon Oct 3, 2016 | 12:12am EDT

Colombians reject deal to end 52-year FARC rebel war

By Helen Murphy and Julia Symmes Cobb | BOGOTA

Colombians narrowly rejected a peace deal with Marxist guerrillas in a referendum on Sunday, plunging the nation into uncertainty and dashing President Juan Manuel Santos' painstakingly negotiated plan to end the 52-year war.

The surprise victory for the "no" camp poured cold water on international joy, from the White House to the Vatican, at what had seemed to be the end of the longest-running conflict in the Americas.

The "no" camp won by 50.21 percent to 49.78 percent. Voter turnout was only 37 percent, perhaps partly owing to torrential rain through the country.

Both sides in the war immediately sought to reassure the world they would try to revive their peace plan.

Santos, 65, said a ceasefire already negotiated would remain in place. He vowed to sit down on Monday with the victorious "no" camp to discuss the way forward, and send his chief negotiator back to Cuba to meet with FARC rebel leaders.

"I will not give up, I will keep seeking peace until the last day of my term because that is the way to leave a better nation for our children," said Santos, who cannot seek re-election when his second term ends in August 2018.

The commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, known by his nom de guerre, Timochenko, gave a similar message from Havana, where peace negotiations have taken place over the last four years.

"The FARC reiterates its disposition to use only words as a weapon to build toward the future," said Timochenko, whose real name is Rodrigo Londono. "To the Colombian people who dream of peace, count on us, peace will triumph."

Santos recently said a "no" vote would mean a return to war, and opinion polls had predicted he would win comfortably.

Traditionally conservative Colombian voters, in favor of peace in principle but unhappy at perceived soft treatment for the guerrillas, confounded those forecasts.

RENEGOTIATION?

Opponents of the pact believed it was too lenient on the FARC rebels by allowing them to re-enter society, form a political party and escape jail sentences.

"I voted no. I don't want to teach my children that everything can be forgiven," said Bogota engineer Alejandro Jaramillo, 35.

Opponents want a renegotiation of the deal with rebel leaders serving jail time and receiving no free seats in Congress.

"We all want peace, no one wants violence," said influential former president Alvaro Uribe who led the "No" campaign. "We insist on corrections so there is respect for the constitution... We want to contribute to a national accord and be heard."

"No" voters appeared to have been more highly motivated on Sunday. And some Colombians may have felt pressured to tell pollsters they were voting for peace despite private doubts.

Regions still riven by the conflict, including poor areas along the Pacific and Caribbean coasts, voted resoundingly in favor of the deal, but formerly violent interior regions pacified during the Uribe presidency backed the "no" camp.

The rebels, whose numbers were halved to about 7,000 in recent years because of a U.S.-backed military offensive, had agreed to turn in weapons and fight for power at the ballot box instead.

Under the accord, the FARC, which began as a peasant revolt in 1964, would have been able to compete in the 2018 presidential and legislative elections and have 10 unelected congressional seats guaranteed through 2026.

It would also have given up its role in the lucrative illegal drug trade and taken part in reforming rural Colombia.

But controversially, many rebel leaders who ordered killings, bombings and displacements would have had to appear before a special tribunal that could sentence them to alternative punishments like clearing landmines.

BLOODSHED

Related Coverage
VIDEO Colombia's Santos committed to peace, despite 'no' vote
Colombia's Santos accepts 'no' win in peace vote, says ceasefire to continue
Colombia's FARC leader say he maintains will for peace despite referendum loss

For decades, the FARC bankrolled the longest-running conflict in the Americas through the illegal drug trade, kidnapping and extortion.

Battles between the guerrillas, paramilitaries, drug gangs and the army raged in the countryside and there were atrocities committed on all sides.

The conflict took more than 220,000 lives and displaced millions of people. At one stage, the FARC was positioned close to the capital and the state was on the verge of collapse.

Supporters of the peace deal were stunned by the plebiscite result.

"How sad. It seems Colombia has forgotten about the cruelty of war, our deaths, our injured, our mutilated, our victims and the suffering we've all lived through with this war," said Adriana Rivera, 43, a philosophy professor standing tearfully at the hotel of the "yes" campaign.

The vote was a disaster for Santos, who had hoped to turn his focus quickly to other matters including possible talks with the smaller ELN rebel group, a much-needed tax reform and other economic measures to compensate for a drop in oil income.

The government had hoped peace would lead to a boom in investment by commodities investors, in gold mines, oil and agriculture in Latin America's fourth-largest economy.

After Sunday's vote, companies will be rethinking the situation.

Although the "no" camp has broached the idea of fresh talks, the FARC has said no group sits at a negotiating table to agree to jail time.

"Today will be remembered by history as the moment Colombia turned its back on what could have been the end of a war that for more than 50 years devastated millions of lives," said Erika Guevara-Rosas, Americas director for rights group Amnesty International. "Even though it was imperfect, the accord was a sure path to peace and justice."

(Reporting by Helen Murphy and Julia Symmes Cobb; Additional reporting by Carlos Vargas and Monica Garcia; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Kieran Murray and Peter Cooney)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.voanews.com/a/colombia-referendum/3533492.html

Colombians Reject FARC Deal; President Santos Vows to Not Give Up on Peace

Last Updated: October 02, 2016 10:02 PM
Celia Mendoza

BOGOTA, COLOMBIA —*Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos says he is not giving up on peace after Sunday's stunning defeat of a referendum on a treaty with FARC rebels.
Voters narrowly rejected the deal 50.2 percent to 49.7. Public opinion polls going into Sunday's voting forecast the referendum would pass overwhelmingly.

Santos went on Colombian television to accept defeat of the referendum, but refused to declare that peace with the rebels is dead.

"I will not give in and I will continue to seek peace to the last day of my mandate," he said.

Santos ordered his negotiators to return to Havana, Cuba, where four years of peace talks had taken place. Santos reassured the nation that the cease-fire with the rebels will remain.

The leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, Rodrigo Londono, who is also known as Timochenko, is also refusing to give up.

"To the Colombian people who dream of peace, count on us. Peace will triumph."
He is also expected to return to Havana.

Supporters of both sides took to the streets of Bogota after the results of the referendum were announced. The "no" celebrated while a group of "yes" voters, dressed in white from head to toe, gathered outside President Santos' home.

Video

Voz de América

@VOANoticias
#ColombiaDecide NO en el #PlebiscitoDePaz: 50,23% de los votantes están en contra del acuerdo de paz entre el gobierno y las FARC.
4:13 PM - 2 Oct 2016
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The peace agreement signed last week was aimed at formally ending the 52 year-old uprising by the leftist rebels. The guerrilla war in Colombia has killed more than 220,000 people and driven millions from their homes.

The Santos government had waged a fierce campaign in favor of the peace deal, appealing to the millions of Colombians who say they are sick of war and violence and terrorism.

But the "no" side, led by Santos' chief political rival, former President Alvaro Uribe, campaigned just as vigorously against the deal.

Many "no" voters were genuinely offended that nearly all FARC rebels will avoid prison time for crimes allegedly committed during the uprising and get various financial support from the government.

They are also upset that FARC would be guaranteed seats in the Colombian congress without an election in exchange for transforming FARC into a political party.

Timochenko had publicly asked for forgiveness for whatever harm was committed by the rebels during the long uprising.

The FARC rebellion began as a simple peasant uprising in 1964 and soon grew into a major threat to various Colombian obtainments over the next five decades.

“No more war,” declared President Santos in his remarks following Timochenko. “I welcome you to democracy, change weapons for votes and weapons for ideas.”

The conflict since the mid-1960s displaced millions of people and left more than 250,000 dead.

The FARC has agreed to cooperate with de-mining, an effort being led by the United States and Norway.

It used drug trafficking as a major source of funding. Kidnapping politicians and foreigners and holding them hostage in remote jungle hideouts was a FARC trademark.

The United States spent billions of dollars in military aid to help the Colombian government combat FARC and bring it to the negotiating table.

VOA's Steve Herman in Washington contributed to this report.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
The US paid in $$$ for the most part - Colombians paid in blood. LOTS of blood.

I'm not surprised at the outcome.
=============================

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines/092000-01.htm

Published on Wednesday, September 20, 2000 in the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel

'Civilian Army' of Americans Helps Fight Colombia's Drug War
by E.A. Torriero and Pedro Ruz Gutierrez
*
FLORENCIA, Colombia - The hotshot pilot swoops down at 200 mph in his Vietnam-era crop duster, gliding only 50 feet over the coca valleys he has been hired to destroy.

Colombian soldiers carry the body of a rebel of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, in Fusagasuga, about 50 miles south of Bogota, on Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2000. Seven FARC rebels were killed in combat Tuesday with soldiers in Colombia's ongoing civil conflict. At least 35,000 people have been killed in the conflict in the last 10 years. (AP Photo/Scott Dalton)

The U.S. Army veteran earns $90,000 a year tax-free as a civilian pilot, but he understands the downside of this job very well. More than once, he's had to dodge bullets from peasants and guerrillas trying to protect Colombia's multibillion-dollar cocaine trade.

This is one pilot who won't mind giving up a big paycheck should his working conditions continue to deteriorate. "If we start getting into a civil war, I'm out of here," said the pilot, whose employer has ordered its workers not to talk to the media. "Americans will be targeted."

For now, though, he is part of a growing civilian army hired by Uncle Sam to help fight Colombia's war on drugs, to be financed largely by $1.3 billion in U.S. aid. Daredevil pilots with military experience, retired top brass and former Green Berets are all part of the effort as the first $300 million in aid heads to Colombia next month.

Expertise in intelligence and law enforcement is a must. Fluency in Spanish and knowledge of counter-terrorism, jungle warfare and counter-surveillance is a plus. While there are limits to the number of American military people who will be involved in training Colombian troops, there are fewer restrictions on how many U.S. civilians can be hired by defense contractors. Hundreds of Americans, lured by hefty salaries for hazardous work, will play a key role battling guerrillas and traffickers who live off the illicit drug trade.

"Every pirate, bandit -- everyone who wants to make money on the war -- they're in Colombia," said one congressional aide in Washington, who said he would speak candidly only if he were not identified. He described efforts to snare contracts as a "free-for-all."

"This is what we call outsourcing a war," he said. Much of the effort, however, will come from companies very familiar to the U.S. government. At least a dozen U.S. firms are lining up to bid on Uncle Sam's foreign venture.

FARC commander Fernando Caicedo sits in a retaurant in a small town near the FARC headquarters. He says that Plan Colombia and its introduction of military helicopters will lead to a full civil war in southern Colombia. TOM BURTON/ THE ORLANDO SENTINEL

Pay is high, but so are the risks. The crash of a U.S. Army spy plane that killed five American soldiers last summer underscored the potential for casualties. Relatives, including those of Capt. Jose Santiago Jr. of Orlando, dispute the official Army version of pilot error and suggest a rebel missile could have shot down the reconnaissance plane.

Three civilian pilots of Reston, Va.-based DynCorp. and EAST Inc., under contract with the State Department, have died in plane crashes since 1997.

DynCorp did not return telephone calls asking for information on its Colombia activities.

DynCorp. has up to 30 pilots and crews in charge of fumigating coca fields with glyphosate, a stronger version of the household weedkiller Roundup.

The company's presence has grown from only a few pilots several years ago to more than 60 workers at the Larandia military base near here.
It is difficult to predict how many Americans will become a part of the Colombian conflict.

Up to 100 Special Forces and Navy SEALs already are teaching Colombia's new military-led counter-narcotics battalions. U.S. workers operating ground-radar stations and civilian coca-spraying crews provide aircraft maintenance at Colombian bases.

On any given day, 150 to 250 Americans are helping in Colombia's drug war.

Soldiers as trainers
That number will grow to 500 U.S. troops and 300 civilians under new caps that can be increased by the president.

American officials say that the U.S. military will not be directly involved in operations, and the U.S. soldiers will act solely as trainers.

And much of the contract work for non-military help will be given first to U.S. companies, which will parcel the work to Colombian subcontractors.
Of the $120 million in U.S. non-military aid in the next three years, more than two-thirds of the contracts will go to U.S. firms or charity groups.
Americans will supervise projects to overhaul Colombia's maligned justice system, teach farmers to grow alternative crops to coca and opium, and relocate Colombians fleeing the civil war.

A gift shop outside the headquarters of the Colombian rebel group FARC does brisk business over the weekend. Behind the counter is Susana Castro, a 22-year-old, seven-year veteran of the FARC. The visitors at the counter were at the FARC headquarters for a peace conference being hosted by the guerrillas. TOM BURTON/THE ORLANDO SENTINEL
"We are not talking about a large American presence on the ground," said a senior U.S. aid official in Washington who would speak only on background. "Frankly, we think the Colombians are better suited to do the jobs that have to be done."

But American firms are cashing in. Bell-Textron and United Technologies' Sikorsky Aircraft have signed to deliver 18 new UH-60 Blackhawks and 42 "Super" Huey II helicopters.

Orders are pending for at least 14 more by the Colombian Defense Ministry, making the windfall for the helicopter makers in excess of $600 million.

Military Personnel Resources Inc., a Virginia-based military-consultant company run by retired U.S. generals, already is advising the Colombian armed forces. Other U.S firms have started peddling nighttime surveillance gear, riverboat technology, aircraft maintenance services and other wares.

While U.S. companies are leading the rush, foreign companies also are looking to benefit.

Israeli Defense Industries is trying to sell observation technology to the Colombian Air Force to outfit its Vietnam-era OV-10 "Bronco" planes, the same ones leased by the U.S. in fumigation raids.

But it is the growing U.S. presence that has critics from Bogotá to Washington calling the American aid package a prelude to another Vietnam debacle, with U.S. forces being lured into combat.

Already, some of the people working for private U.S. contractors are near the front lines.

MPRI, for example, has a former brigadier general, six retired colonels and several former officers in Colombia to help reorganize the Colombian armed forces under an 18-month Department of Defense contract worth $800,000.

Founded by former U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Carl Vuono in 1987, MPRI has about $60 million in contracts worldwide with more than 400 employees who sell their expertise while "capitalizing on the experience and skills of America's best seasoned professionals," according to a company profile. Vuono brings a wealth of experience to the job, having led the U.S. Army's Panama and Gulf War operations.

DynCorp. has at least several dozen pilots and ground-support workers operating under close guard at Colombian military bases, according to one of the company pilots.

They fly missions to eradicate coca fields with Colombian police and military helicopters alongside to provide cover.

DynCorp., a Fortune 500 company, is one of the largest defense contractors in the United States, with strong ties to the CIA and other federal agencies. It has projected sales worth up to $2.5 billion in defense work and commercial ventures by next year.

The trend toward using private contractors and hired guns to carry out U.S. foreign policy is not new. But it's a trend that's growing.
DynCorp., MPRI and other defense contractors have provided services in the world's hot spots from Bosnia to the Persian Gulf.

Their contracts are supervised by the U.S. Defense or State department.
Defense experts say that this so-called outsourcing is not only cost efficient, it helps shield U.S. lawmakers from criticism if Americans are killed or injured.

"The military tends to view the civilian contractors as a lot less confrontational way of doing business," said Chris Hellman, a senior analyst at the Center for Defense Information in Washington. "It's perceived as a more benign presence."

Defense contractors say their aim is not to fight another country's battles. "We're very transparent," said retired Army Gen. Ed Soyster, an MPRI spokesman and former head of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency. "We're having (the Colombians) restructure, refocus and demonstrate correct processes."

'Old boys' club'
Soyster would not discuss an MPRI evaluation of Colombian forces earlier this year, but said, "What we do is set them up so that what they do, they do it efficiently."

But critics charge that there isn't a lot of oversight in the bidding for the profitable overseas projects.

"It's an old boys' club," said the congressional aide, who has monitored Colombia funding. "All these generals get hired (by consultants) and do nothing."

Soyster, however, defended his company's mission, saying it adheres to "uncompromising principles of integrity, honor, courage, loyalty and selfless service."

Like many contractors, MPRI makes its work quite public.
It has a 10,000-name database and has ongoing recruiting at U.S military bases. Several months ago, it advertised for "highly qualified and experienced American military officers and senior noncommissioned officers" for its Colombia-U.S. "working group."

Less forthcoming about its activities is Eagle Aviation Services and Technology Inc. of Patrick Air Force Base, where fumigation pilots are trained by the State Department's Bureau of Narcotics and International Law Enforcement's air division.

The company, also known as EAST Inc., is incorporated in several states but refuses to discuss its role in Colombia because it sees it as classified. State Department officials have said EAST is concerned for the safety of its personnel.

EAST Inc. has placed ads in Ag Pilot, a magazine for crop dusters, to hire pilots for fumigation work in Colombia's fields. One ad read: "Highly experienced Ag pilots for year-round positions.

Based in Florida, will work in Central and South America. (Job requires) ability to speak Spanish and converse in a clear and understandable manner to a variety of native speakers."

At the Larandia military base 40 miles south of here, American pilots live in virtual seclusion.

They venture out sometimes for a meal or a drink but only with armed Colombian soldiers and police in tow.

The soldiers in the rebel FARC are mostly teenagers and include many women, leading to occasional romance. TOM BURTON/ THE ORLANDO SENTINEL

Mostly, American pilots fly fumigation missions in daylight and darkness. They work in three-week shifts and then often shuttle back to the United States for a week off.

Colombian choppers fly cover for the American pilots. But increasingly, the Americans are becoming targets for the rebels.

Two American pilots flying Vietnam-era OV-10 Broncos in the rebel-infested Caqueta province last month aborted their spraying mission when they encountered gunfire.

Even so, one pilot thinks the tide will turn once the full force of the U.S. commitment takes place.

The rebels, he said, will lose their willpower.

Yet, he also predicts the Colombian pilots aren't prepared for battle either. "They want us to fight their war for them."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...ainst-peace-farc-president-santos-better-deal

Colombia
Opinion
Why Colombians voted against peace with the Farc

Isabel Hilton
The result has shocked many, not least President Santos. But his predecessors gave Colombians reason to hope for a better deal

‘Colombia’s long history of violence and its tortured politics offer many possible explanations for the no result.’ Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Monday 3 October 2016 05.23*EDT
Last modified on Monday 3 October 2016 13.15*EDT
Comments 387

It could not have been closer: by a margin of 0.4% the people of Colombia have rejected a peace agreement that would have brought a formal end to 52 years of civil war and allowed the remaining 7,000 fighters of the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc) to reintegrate into the nation’s life and politics. With their votes, Colombians have highlighted the country’s profound geographic and political divisions and left Colombia, once again, on the edge of the unknown.

What President Juan Manuel Santos presented to the voters as a historic opportunity has turned into a political nightmare. It was a deal supported by everyone from Barack Obama to Pope Francis – although the conservative church leaders in Colombia had maintained a notable silence on the subject. Perhaps reassured by polls that predicted a comfortable win, the president’s administration, as one insider remarked last week, had no Plan B.

Why did a fraction more than half the voters, in a country blighted for the entire lives of most of its citizens by a war that has killed 250,000 people and displaced 6 million, reject the offer of peace and the investment and prosperity that it might bring?

Colombia’s long history of violence and its tortured politics offer many possible explanations: Santos is not personally popular and by putting himself and the Farc commander-in-chief Timoleón Jiménez – Timochenko – front and centre of the agreement, and the lavish signing ceremony organised a week before the referendum, he alienated as many voters as he attracted. “If he had had the grace to step back and let the victims speak,” complained one Colombian commentator before the vote, “it would have been completely different. He would have held the moral high ground and people could have voted for peace without feeling they were being invited to support Santos.”

Álvaro Uribe argued that, once the ex-guerrillas entered politics, Colombia would end up with a leftwing dictatorship

Repeated hints from supporters of the president that he and Timochenko were in line for a Nobel peace prize did not help. Why should a guerrilla leader with so much blood on his hands, people complained, be honoured with such a prize?


Colombia’s former President Uribe during a protest against the government’s peace accord with the Farc. Photograph: John Vizcaíno/Reuters


The far-right former president Álvaro Uribe, who retains strong support in his home base of Antioquia, campaigned vigorously for “no” for reasons of ideology as well as self-interest. Under Uribe’s presidency, killing by the army and far-right militias escalated to new heights, as did the land grabs that fuelled much of the violence in that phase of the war. A national survey last year confirmed that nearly half of Colombia’s land is owned by 0.4% of the population, and even had the agreement passed, few of those who gained land through paramilitary violence were ready to hand it back.

In the days before the referendum, prospective voters in Medellín – a stronghold of Uribe’s – offered a range of reasons to vote no: that the Farc would be allowed to keep their ill-gotten gains; that once the ex-guerrillas entered politics, Colombia would end up with a leftwing dictatorship; that ordinary Colombians would have to pay for the deal while the men of violence reaped the gains of the peace; and finally that those with blood on their hands would not be punished for past crimes.

Other less polarising figures, such as the conservative former president Andrés Pastrana, also supported a no vote, arguing that the agreement conceded too much to the Farc. Santos was wrong, he said, to frame it as a choice between peace and war: in this political argument, all sides claim to want peace. But for Pastrana, the choice was between this deal and a better one that he believed was possible. The Farc themselves, Pastrana insisted, had said that they would not return to arms in the event of a no vote.

It remains to be seen whether the Farc will finally put down their guns and accept less favourable terms: Colombia’s capacity for violence of both the far left and the far right is undiminished, and Timochenko’s authority has been shaken by this shock result, as has Santos’s: Uribe’s party lost no time in calling for the president to step down.

In the minutes that followed the announcement of the final result, Timochenko promised on Twitter that he would continue to talk, and the Farc tweeted that: “The love we feel in our hearts is gigantic and with our words and actions will be able to reach peace.”

Few Colombians will have been moved by this declaration of love from a movement with the Farc’s record of kidnapping and violence, despite some recent expressions of regret for the suffering of the victims. And infinite love aside, it would be no surprise if many of the Farc rank and file were to reach nervously for their weapons and return to their bases.

When a sober President Santos emerged to make a statement, three hours after the polls closed, he too insisted that the ceasefire remained in place and announced that he would convene all sides in the political argument to discuss a way forward. He went on to guarantee national stability, public order and the continued search for peace. Colombians on all sides of this bitter conflict have need of all three.

comments (387)

Analysis Colombia’s Brexit moment as politicians misjudge popular anger at Farc amnesty
All sides left shocked by narrow rejection of peace deal which would have seen guerrillas guilty of war crimes escape jail
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Álvaro Uribe argued that, once the ex-guerrillas entered politics, Colombia would end up with a leftwing dictatorship

This should be a lesson to those in the FUSA who believe - mistakenly - that the left will not and cannot fight.

They will, and they can. Be prepared...
 
Álvaro Uribe argued that, once the ex-guerrillas entered politics, Colombia would end up with a leftwing dictatorship

This should be a lesson to those in the FUSA who believe - mistakenly - that the left will not and cannot fight.

They will, and they can. Be prepared...
and these ex-guerrillas are narco terrorist leftists
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-colombia-peace-idUSKCN12422P

WORLD NEWS | Tue Oct 4, 2016 | 10:13pm EDT

Colombia government, rebels in crisis talks after 'no' to peace deal

By Marc Frank and Helen Murphy | HAVANA/BOGOTA

Colombia's government and Marxist guerrillas went back to the drawing board on Tuesday after a peace deal they painstakingly negotiated over four years was rejected in a shock referendum result.

In a vote that confounded opinion polls and was a disaster for President Juan Manuel Santos, Colombians narrowly rebuffed the pact on Sunday as too lenient on the rebels.

Lead negotiators Humberto de la Calle and Sergio Jaramillo were back at a Havana convention center on Tuesday meeting counterparts from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) to see what the rebels are willing to do, the government said.

The Cuban capital had been the venue since 2012 for talks between the two sides that reached an accord to end Colombia's 52-year war, which has killed around a quarter of a million people.

All sides, including "No" voters, who carried the day on Sunday by less than half a percentage point, say they want an end to war, and the two parties have kept their ceasefire.

But there is vehement opposition - led by hardline former President Alvaro Uribe - to major planks of the previous deal, including guaranteed congressional seats for the FARC and immunity from traditional jail sentences for leaders.

A renegotiation seems to depend on whether the FARC would accept tougher conditions, maybe combined with a softening of Uribe's demands. After years of refusing to meet negotiators, Uribe has now said he is willing to seek a joint solution.

Santos and Uribe will meet on Wednesday morning, the president's office said.

Santos late on Tuesday decreed that a government ceasefire put in place in August would be extended until the end of the month in a bid to allow time to salvage the deal. The original ceasefire was nullified when the peace accord was rejected in the plebiscite. He did not say if the ceasefire would be extended further.

“I hope we can advance with the accord and with the dialogue so we can solidify the corrections and the agreements that will allow us to move forward on a solution to this conflict,” Santos said in a statement.

The statement appeared to worry rebels, who questioned what would happen after Oct. 31.

"From then on, does the war continue?" FARC leader Timochenko tweeted, while rebel commander Pastor Alape advised rebel fighters to seek safe positions to avoid provocations.

Colombian Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin said the decision whether to officially renegotiate the accord lies with the FARC.

On Monday the rebels said they would remain "faithful" to the negotiated accord, and Twitter messages from FARC leadership appeared to suggest reluctance to change the terms at this stage.

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"The thing is, just as the government has its deal breakers, so does the FARC, so we have to see if it is willing to reopen the accord," Holguin told reporters. "There was no Plan B, we believed the nation wanted peace."

Three representatives from Uribe's right-wing Democratic Center party are to pore over details with three from the government. In what may turn into a dual negotiation process, those meetings are to commence once de la Calle returns from Cuba.

Colombian financial markets fell on Monday as investors worried that the limbo over the peace deal would hold up fiscal reforms such as tax changes.

Finance Minister Mauricio Cardenas, however, said the tax reforms would go ahead.

(Additional reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne and Helen Murphy; Editing by Frances Kerry and Leslie Adler)
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
There was no Plan B

Always a dangerous thing.

SF planning calls for 4 plans in place before operations commence - the acronym is PACE

P- primary
A- alternate
C- contingency
E- emergency
 
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