Colombia’s leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) declared a ceasefire on Saturday for a three-week period covering a tight presidential election race on Sunday, campaigning for which has centered on how to end five decades of war with the guerrilla group.
The ceasefire, which runs from today until June 30, was announced in a scathing open letter to opposition candidate Oscar Ivan Zuluaga posted on the group’s Web site, in which it accuses him of making inflammatory statements and trying to foment more war.
Analysts say the rebel group is interested in avoiding Zuluaga’s election because conditions he would impose to continue peace talks could lead to the breakdown of negotiations and a return to all-out war. The talks were started in Havana in 2012 by Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos.
“We want to tell the country, through you [Zuluaga], our decision to declare another unilateral ceasefire for the occasion of the second round of elections to the Presidency of the Republic,” said the letter signed by FARC leader Timoleon Jimenez, who is known as Timochenko.
The long letter, announcing the ceasefire near the end, appeared designed to convince voters a week before elections that Zuluaga would undo progress toward peace achieved under Santos and reduce hopes of ending the war if voted into power.
The election has divided voters between Santos backers who want to give more time to peace talks and Zuluaga supporters who doubt the rebels will disarm and walk away from the lucrative illegal drug trade if a deal is signed.
Three voter polls on Thursday and Friday failed to predict a clear winner in Sunday’s election. A Gallup poll put the two in a dead heat, while two others gave a solid lead to one candidate or the other.
Zuluaga is backed by popular ex-president Alvaro Uribe who, from 2002 to 2010, led an unprecedented US-backed assault against the FARC that is estimated to have halved their ranks to about 8,000. Many Zuluaga backers believe continuing that onslaught is the only realistic way to end a conflict that has killed about 220,000 people over five decades.
Zuluaga demands a FARC ceasefire, jail terms for FARC leaders and an end to the planting of landmines, among other points, in order for the talks to continue.
The head of the FARC negotiation team in Havana told reporters on Saturday that the delegation felt they were getting closer to “the summit, the Mount Everest of rights, which is peace.”
Despite opening negotiations with the FARC, the government has continued to pursue the rebels militarily in their jungle hideouts and the FARC rebels have refused to declare a ceasefire unless the government reciprocates.
Nonetheless, the FARC declared a week-long ceasefire around the period covering the first round of elections on May 25, in which Zuluaga won more votes than other candidates, but fell far short of the 50 percent of votes needed to avoid a run-off.
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