My Colombian Peace Process
The Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia (FARC in Spanish) are currently in peace conversations in Havana,
Cuba.
This is their third attempt of peace negotiations in
the last 30 years.
The first attempt took place in 1984. I was nine
years-old at the time. I remember President Betancourt smiling on TV, FARC
commanders crying of joy, and we children painting giant white doves on every
block.
In 1986, the
Patriotic Union Party (UP in Spanish) was formed as political wing of the FARC.
Many former guerrillas and their sympathizers joined UP. Many participated
openly in local and national elections, and some even became elected officials.
However, extreme groups from both the left and the right literary wiped them
out. Moderate estimates placed the number of assassinations around 1,163. Later
on, it was confirmed that the majority of these deaths were systematic killings
by extreme groups connected to the Colombian military.
I was eleven years-old
and I began to have an idea that something big was happening. But perhaps, for
me, the ultimate awakening became with the 1987 assassination of UP
Presidential candidate, Jaime Pardo Leal. I remember my poor English teacher
trying to calm us down while explaining what was happening. We were dismissed
from school early that day.
Citizens protesting the
assassination of Jaime Pardo Leal
The second peace process attempt took place in 1999. As part
of the negotiations, the FARC were granted a demilitarized zone of about 25,000
sq. miles in a remote forest area of Southern Colombia. Later on, the FARC were
accused of lack of sincere desire for peace. In fact, they were accused of
using the demilitarize zone to fortify itself militarily. In 2002, the
Colombian army finally retook the zone. I was 27 years-old and certain
that the conflict would reemerge with increased ferocity. Sadly, I was
right.
President
Pastrana waiting for FARC commander Manuel Marulanda. The fail meeting was the
beginning of the end for the second peace process.
Thus, I look at this new peace process hoping for the best
but expecting the worse. Let us hope
that this generation will finally see the dawn of this ending night, and that
their children learn about this conflict only from the history books.
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