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Rebels say kidnappings for ransom will end only if government funds ceasefire

Published:Thursday | December 28, 2023 | 12:08 AM
FILE - Antonio Garcia of the Colombian guerilla National Liberation Army (ELN) speaks to the press after signing an agreement with the Colombian government to resume peace talks in Caracas, Venezuela, on October 4, 2022.
FILE - Antonio Garcia of the Colombian guerilla National Liberation Army (ELN) speaks to the press after signing an agreement with the Colombian government to resume peace talks in Caracas, Venezuela, on October 4, 2022.

BOGOTÁ, (AP):

The head of Colombia’s largest remaining rebel group said on Monday it would only abide by a recent agreement to suspend the kidnappings of civilians for ransom if the government keeps its promise to finance projects that could provide the rebels with alternate sources of income.

In a column published on Christmas Day, National Liberation Army commander Antonio García argued that Colombian officials and journalists had misinformed the public on December 17, when they announced that the rebels had agreed to stop kidnappings if a ceasefire with the government is extended next year.

Colombians have grown angry at kidnappings by the guerrillas, known by their Spanish initials as the ELN.

García said that while such an agreement was reached during a recent round of peace talks in Mexico City, the government had also agreed in the talks to create a committee that would find ways to finance the peace talks and the current ceasefire, and determine what kind of activities will be funded.

The conflict between the government and the leftist rebels of the ELN dates back to the 1960s. The larger Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, agreed a peace deal with the government in 2016, but the ELN still has about 2,000 to 4,000 fighters in Colombia and neighbouring Venezuela.

ELN leader García wrote that public funding for the ceasefire should be “linked” to the suspension of kidnappings.

“Peace is not designed for just one side to win,” he wrote. “Everyone must benefit, especially the country.”

García’s announcement marks a setback for Colombia’s first leftist government, which had described the tentative agreement by the ELN to stop kidnappings as an important step towards peace.