Colombia gov't, largest FARC dissident group to begin peace talks

Reuters

Published Sep 19, 2023 02:42PM ET

BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's government and the Estado Mayor Central (EMC (NYSE:EMC_old)), the largest FARC dissident group, on Tuesday said in a joint statement they would begin peace talks on Oct. 8 and start a 10-month bilateral, national ceasefire on the same day.

The EMC was founded by dissident former members of the now-demobilized Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels, who reject a 2016 peace deal signed by that group.

Talks between Colombia's government and the EMC are part of leftist President Gustavo Petro's attempt to end the country's armed conflict, which has run for almost six decades and killed almost half a million people.

Oct. 8 will see the "installation of peace talks and the declaration of the agreement to respect civilians and the (ceasefire), and a cessation of offensive operations," the parties said in the statement.

From Nov. 11 to Aug. 8, 2024 the parties will evaluate the implementation of both the agreement to respect civilians and the ceasefire, the statement added.

Colombia's government in May suspended a national ceasefire with the EMC in some areas of the Andean country following the murder of four Indigenous teenagers. The four minors were forcibly recruited by the group and then shot dead when they attempted to escape, Indigenous groups have said.

Colombia's attorney general suspended arrest warrants for more than 20 members of the EMC earlier in March to allow them to participate in the dialogue.