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Colombian President Vows to Save Peace Deal despite Popular Rejection

Colombian President Vows to Save Peace Deal despite Popular Rejection
folder_openLatin America access_time7 years ago
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Local Editor

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos pledged to save a landmark peace deal with FARC rebels after voters rejected it in a referendum which shocked many people across the nation.

Colombian President Vows to Save Peace Deal despite Popular Rejection

In a televised address, Santos said he had asked the government's chief negotiator to begin discussions with the opposition on changes to the peace deal in order to reach an agreement.

Santos's top political rival, former president Alvaro Uribe, led the "No" campaign. His right-wing Democratic Center party wants jail terms for FARC rebels who committed serious crimes and some of rebel leaders to be banned from politics.

The president called an emergency meeting with leaders of the country's political parties after Sunday's shock referendum defeat but Uribe did not attend it.

A visibly crestfallen Santos said the meeting would seek "common ground and unity" in order to "realize the dream of every Colombian to end the war with the FARC."

He called on chief negotiator Humberto de la Calle, who had earlier offered his resignation, to "begin discussions as soon as possible addressing all the necessary issues to have an agreement."

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia also said they would maintain their ceasefire put in place over a year ago and "remain faithful" to the peace accord signed last week with the government.

FARC leader Rodrigo Londono said in a video from Havana that the Marxist guerrillas remained committed to the ongoing ceasefire and that they were prepared to "fix" the rejected deal.

Meanwhile, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon "urgently" sent his Colombia envoy to Havana, where the four-year talks have been held, for new consultations.

The peace deal was signed last week, formally ending 52 years of bloody armed clashes that that has claimed more than 260,000 lives and left 45,000 missing.

The peace deal had been hailed as historic but many Colombians resented the blood shed by the Marxist guerrillas and the lenient punishment the deal meted out for their crimes.

The deal broadly split the country where the Marxist group exerts notable influence across some poverty-stricken areas. Voters rejected the agreement by a narrow margin, with a turnout of just over 37 percent.

Santos, however, said, "With the will for peace from all sides, I am sure we can reach satisfactory solutions for everyone soon."

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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