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No operation to free ex-lawmaker held by Colombia rebels: Red Cross
by Staff Writers
Bogota (AFP) Oct 31, 2016


UN agrees to press on with Colombia mission
United Nations, United States (AFP) Oct 31, 2016 - The UN Security Council agreed Monday to press on with the deployment of a new UN mission for Colombia that will monitor a ceasefire until a final peace deal is reached.

The council endorsed recommendations from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to deploy 400 observers in Colombia after President Juan Manuel Santos extended the ceasefire with FARC rebels until December 31.

The government signed a historic peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) on September 26 to end decades of conflict, but in a shock move, voters rejected the deal in a referendum.

With 152 observers already on the ground, Ban told council members in a letter that it was important to "quickly ramp up the mission's capacity" to get to work on truce monitoring.

Under the peace deal, the UN mission was to oversee the disarming of rebels but its tasks for now will be limited to the ceasefire monitoring.

Ban said the mission can accommodate immediately another 68 observers and noted that support from Latin American and Caribbean countries was critical to build up the monitoring force.

Both the government and the FARC had requested that the UN mission be authorized to verify the ceasefire signed on October 13.

Ban argued in the letter sent last week that the mission is now more important than ever.

"Its presence helps to foster popular confidence that, however complex the ongoing political dialogue may be, a point of no return has been reached in the search for peace in Colombia," he wrote in the letter obtained by AFP.

Over the weekend, Santos said he was hoping for a peace deal by Christmas and warned that any further delay could make the peace process "explode."

The Red Cross said Monday there was no operation underway to free an ex-lawmaker whose captivity by the Colombian rebel group ELN is holding up peace talks with the guerrillas.

"There is no operation going on right now," a source at the International Committee of the Red Cross told AFP.

The declaration contradicted a statement by a Colombia government official last week that the ICRC was involved, with the Catholic Church, in a process to secure the freedom of the former congressman, Odin Sanchez, who was seized in April.

The ICRC is usually the go-between in hostage handovers involving rebel groups in Colombia.

The organization declined to make further comments on its role in a possible future handover of Sanchez beyond confirming it was "ready to facilitate any operation of a humanitarian nature."

Colombia's government has struck a historic peace deal with the country's biggest rebel group, the FARC, but its solidity is uncertain after voters rejected it in an October 2 referendum.

Efforts to hammer out a similar agreement with the smaller ELN have foundered over the issue of Sanchez's captivity.

Publicly announced talks were meant to have started last Thursday in the Ecuadorian capital Quito, but the government postponed them because Sanchez had not been freed.

But ELN negotiator Pablo Beltran said the group had not promised to release Sanchez before the dialogue was launched.

Colombia is seeking to put an end to a half-century of violence that has seen more than 260,000 people killed by leftwing rebels, paramilitaries and security forces.


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