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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Disarmed, Colombia’s FARC seek political rebirth

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BOGOTA: Colombia’s leftist FARC rebels are seeking political rebirth as they move to transform into a party to seek elected office after disarming to end a half-century war.


About 1,000 delegates from the freshly demobilised Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia will launch a founding congress to choose their political representatives.


They will choose a name for the party and candidates to run in next year’s general elections.


“We are going to define the character of the political party that we aspire to build,” former guerrilla commander Carlos Antonio Lozada said.


He said they will also shape “its structure and name the leaders, at least at national level.”


Another former commander of the force, Ivan Marquez, said he expected the movement to call itself the Alternative Revolutionary Force of Colombia.


However, the overall FARC leader Rodrigo Londono canvassed opinion on Twitter and many respondents said they favoured the name “New Colombia.”


Conflict analyst Frederic Masse of Bogota’s Externado University said the debate reflected a “dilemma” in the movement.


“Some want to keep the word ‘revolutionary’ while others want to change that to show that this is a new start,” Masse said.


Regardless of how many votes they may win, the peace deal signed with the government last year guarantees the new party five seats in each of the two legislative chambers for two terms. “We hope to get enough votes not only to justify those five senate and five lower house representatives, but also we aspire hopefully to achieve an even greater representation,” Lozada said.


Londono has ruled out the new party fielding a presidential candidate.


But he said it will support a candidate who guarantees the peace deal the FARC signed with centre-right President Juan Manuel Santos.


The communist FARC formed in 1964 from a peasant uprising for rural land rights.


Its members have avoided publicly framing their current discussions on their political future with terms such as “socialist” and “communist” however.


— AFP


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