Colombian government and ELN rebels to resume peace talks on Thursday

Colombian government and ELN rebels to resume peace talks on Thursday

A prior round of peace talks had been suspended after an increase in violence on police stations.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos is willing to engage in peace talks with the ELN. (AFP pic)
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos is willing to engage in peace talks with the ELN. (AFP pic)
QUITO:
The Colombian government and the National Liberation Army (ELN) will resume peace talks this Thursday in the Ecuadorian capital Quito, both parties said.

President Juan Manuel Santos’s government suspended negotiations in January following an escalation in violence on police stations that left six people dead and dozens more wounded.

“Tomorrow from 10:00 am in Quito, Ecuador, we will begin the fifth round of peace talks between the government and the ELN,” Santos’s negotiating team said on Twitter, in an announcement echoed by the ELN.

Ecuadorian foreign minister María Fernanda Espinosa, currently in New York, said it was “great news” that the discussions would resume.

“Peace in Colombia is peace for all of Latin America,” she said.

Talks began a year ago in Sangolquí, a suburb of Quito, but were suspended after the end of a historic bilateral ceasefire gave way to a guerilla offensive.

Santos announced Monday that the talks would resume following the rebels’ unilateral ceasefire during legislative elections the day before. The talks are seen as a test of the group’s willingness to get back to negotiations.

He said the parties would discuss a new, “broad and verifiable” ceasefire agreement that would prevent a resurgence of violence of the kind that forced the suspension of talks in January.

The ELN “will continue talking” and “does not reject peace,” said its leader Nicolás Rodríguez Bautista, according to a statement released by negotiators.

Santos, who will leave office this August, is hoping to establish total peace in Colombia after the disarming of the FARC guerrilla group, which has since transformed into a political party.

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