Berliner Boersenzeitung - Colombia backtracks on ceasefire announcement

EUR -
AED 4.034651
AFN 74.614579
ALL 98.669279
AMD 424.679113
ANG 1.980133
AOA 1002.336827
ARS 1070.674821
AUD 1.629561
AWG 1.978591
AZN 1.870216
BAM 1.9562
BBD 2.218454
BDT 131.29685
BGN 1.955905
BHD 0.414017
BIF 3188.222953
BMD 1.098455
BND 1.431793
BOB 7.592414
BRL 6.057649
BSD 1.098725
BTN 92.191656
BWP 14.562845
BYN 3.595735
BYR 21529.710734
BZD 2.214733
CAD 1.498315
CDF 3158.056787
CHF 0.940925
CLF 0.037034
CLP 1021.89221
CNY 7.745314
CNH 7.749394
COP 4628.865839
CRC 569.516464
CUC 1.098455
CUP 29.109048
CVE 110.284541
CZK 25.314938
DJF 195.654667
DKK 7.458155
DOP 66.093516
DZD 145.95093
EGP 53.341064
ERN 16.476819
ETB 133.389263
FJD 2.437801
FKP 0.836538
GBP 0.837929
GEL 3.015277
GGP 0.836538
GHS 17.481257
GIP 0.836538
GMD 75.793238
GNF 9482.939221
GTQ 8.498428
GYD 229.76071
HKD 8.538826
HNL 27.321587
HRK 7.468405
HTG 144.798292
HUF 400.518743
IDR 17187.684353
ILS 4.148715
IMP 0.836538
INR 92.231139
IQD 1439.39435
IRR 46231.218501
ISK 148.478456
JEP 0.836538
JMD 173.505481
JOD 0.778472
JPY 162.488353
KES 141.744287
KGS 93.435762
KHR 4455.830069
KMF 492.438779
KPW 988.608544
KRW 1478.44854
KWD 0.336687
KYD 0.915679
KZT 535.495132
LAK 24261.740551
LBP 98391.22914
LKR 321.935835
LRD 212.061435
LSL 19.187324
LTL 3.243451
LVL 0.664444
LYD 5.255075
MAD 10.770801
MDL 19.337778
MGA 5040.984968
MKD 61.515739
MMK 3567.737788
MNT 3732.548781
MOP 8.798639
MRU 43.499896
MUR 50.82577
MVR 16.861447
MWK 1905.202884
MXN 21.151848
MYR 4.708527
MZN 70.191591
NAD 19.187324
NGN 1779.694083
NIO 40.438269
NOK 11.684515
NPR 147.513166
NZD 1.793571
OMR 0.422923
PAB 1.098715
PEN 4.092937
PGK 4.317922
PHP 62.420231
PKR 305.040379
PLN 4.307425
PYG 8565.75166
QAR 4.006019
RON 4.976553
RSD 117.020546
RUB 106.088534
RWF 1499.779391
SAR 4.124275
SBD 9.093791
SCR 14.96097
SDG 660.72241
SEK 11.347607
SGD 1.430721
SHP 0.836538
SLE 25.096726
SLL 23034.038701
SOS 627.922691
SRD 34.579898
STD 22735.793055
SVC 9.613966
SYP 2759.90014
SZL 19.180224
THB 36.699726
TJS 11.690371
TMT 3.855576
TND 3.369489
TOP 2.572694
TRY 37.646418
TTD 7.448455
TWD 35.363102
TZS 2993.288587
UAH 45.242616
UGX 4037.825718
USD 1.098455
UYU 45.419288
UZS 14074.878253
VEF 3979209.601343
VES 40.635047
VND 27291.105265
VUV 130.41074
WST 3.072886
XAF 656.073246
XAG 0.035062
XAU 0.000414
XCD 2.968628
XDR 0.817367
XOF 656.073246
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.935514
ZAR 19.1816
ZMK 9887.411979
ZMW 29.143429
ZWL 353.701942
  • RBGPF

    -0.2800

    60.52

    -0.46%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    24.58

    +0.04%

  • AZN

    -0.1600

    76.71

    -0.21%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    12.89

    -0.47%

  • NGG

    0.1200

    65.6

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.4100

    38.22

    -1.07%

  • BTI

    -0.0300

    35.17

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    24.815

    +0.1%

  • RIO

    -3.1000

    66.52

    -4.66%

  • RELX

    0.3700

    46.41

    +0.8%

  • BP

    -1.1500

    31.99

    -3.59%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.87

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    0.5500

    141.82

    +0.39%

  • JRI

    0.0150

    13.195

    +0.11%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    33.33

    -0.6%

  • VOD

    -0.0410

    9.649

    -0.42%

Colombia backtracks on ceasefire announcement
Colombia backtracks on ceasefire announcement / Photo: Raul ARBOLEDA - AFP/File

Colombia backtracks on ceasefire announcement

The Colombian government said Wednesday it was suspending a ceasefire it had announced with the ELN armed group, which denied agreeing to any such truce.

Text size:

The reversal dampened hopes for an imminent end to decades of violence that have continued to plague the South American country despite a 2016 peace pact that led to the disarmament of the FARC guerrilla group.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro had declared on New Year's Eve that a temporary truce had been agreed with the country's five largest armed groups, including the National Liberation Army (ELN), from January 1 to June 30.

The government subsequently said the ceasefire, hailed by the international community, would be monitored by the United Nations, Colombia's human rights ombudsman and the Catholic Church.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said it "brings renewed hope for comprehensive peace to the Colombian people as the New Year dawns."

But then on Tuesday, the ELN said it had "not discussed any bilateral ceasefire with the Gustavo Petro government, therefore no such agreement exists."

The group added that "a unilateral government decree cannot be accepted as an agreement."

This prompted the government Tuesday to concede that a proposed ceasefire decree had not yet been finally signed.

And on Wednesday, Interior Minister Alfonso Prada told reporters in Bogota that "we have decided to suspend the legal effects of the decree" in view of the ELN's stated position.- 'Total peace' -

Negotiations between the government and the ELN, the country's last recognized rebel group, have been under way since November.

A first round of peace talks since Petro came to power in August as Colombia's first-ever leftist president, concluded in Caracas, Venezuela on December 12 without a truce being agreed.

Another round of talks is due to take place in Mexico, although no date has been set.

Prada said the issue of a ceasefire will be taken up again in Mexico.

Tuesday's ELN statement said the group was "ready to discuss the proposal for a bilateral ceasefire."

In pursuit of Petro's quest to bring "total peace" to Colombia, the government is offering armed groups "benevolent treatment from the judicial point of view," Senator Ivan Cepeda recently told AFP.

This would be in exchange for "a surrender of assets, a dismantling of these organizations" and agreeing to stop their "illicit economies."

According to Petro's tweet, the government had "agreed to a bilateral ceasefire" with the ELN, two dissident splinter factions of the disbanded FARC, the Gulf Clan narco group and the Self-Defense Forces of the Sierra Nevada, a rightwing paramilitary organization.

The ELN is the only group to have refuted the announcement by Petro, who was himself an urban guerrilla member in his youth.

- Over 50 years of violence -

Negotiations between the government and armed groups which have an estimated combined total of 15,000 fighters, have so far failed to end the spiral of violence engulfing the country.

Colombia has suffered more than 50 years of armed conflict between the state and various groups of left-wing guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries and drug traffickers.

The Indepaz research institute recorded nearly 100 massacres in Colombia last year.

Despite the peace agreement that saw FARC guerrillas disarm in 2017, armed groups remain locked in deadly disputes over drug trafficking revenues and other illegal businesses, according to the think tank.

Colombia is the world's largest cocaine producer.

The ELN, created in 1964, had announced a unilateral ceasefire from Christmas Eve to January 2.

Official estimates are that some 3,500 ELN fighters are present in 22 of Colombia's 32 departments.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)