Colombia announces 10 member sub-committee to discuss bilateral ceasefire with FARC

Javier Alberto Flórez (L), Jorge Enrique Mora Rangel (C) and Óscar Naranjo Trujillo

Colombia’s government has announced the names of ten officials who are set to discuss a bilateral ceasefire on Friday with the country’s largest rebel group, the FARC, in Havana, Cuba.

Following Thursday’s announcement that the deputy commander of the armed forces, Javier Florez, would lead the sub-committee aimed to discuss a bilateral ceasefire and demobilization of the FARC, President Juan Manuel Santos revealed the names of  ten military personnel that will form the group on Friday.

Seven members of the sub-committee consist of high-ranking military personnel, and three are representatives of the Colombian government.

MORE: Deputy commander of Colombia’s armed forces will lead ceasefire talks

The sub-committee consists of:

  • General Javier Alberto Florez

    Deputy Commander of the Armed Forces

  • Colonel Vicente Sarmiento

    National Army of Colombia

  • Colonel Saul Rojas

    National Army of Colombia

  • Admiral Omar Cortez

    Colombian Navy

  • Lieutenant Colonel Edwin Chavarro

    National Police

  • Rodrigo Mezu

    Colombian Air Force

  • Lieutenant Juanita Millan

    Colombian Navy

  • Monica Cifuentes

    Legal Director
    Office of the High Commissioner for Peace

  • Cesar Restrepo

    Director
    Strategic Studies of the Ministry of Defense

  • Alejandro Reyes Lozano

    Advisor
    Office of High Commissioner for Peace

The sub-committee is headed by General Jorge Enrique Mora Rangel and General Oscar Adolfo Naranjo Trujillo. Both officials have been authorized by the Colombian government to negotiate with the FARC.

The ceasefire sub-committee

The sub-committee aims to initiate discussions concerning different options and models for the surrender of arms, demobilization, and eventual ceasefire that would be implemented in the event of a final agreement.

While the group is able to negotiate with the FARC, they are not allowed to make any final agreements. According to the press release from President Santos’ office, all decisions towards reaching an agreement “remain under the responsibility of the plenipotentiaries, on the instructions of President Juan Manuel Santos.”

Peace talks between the FARC and the Colombian government have been ongoing since November 2012. So far, both parties have come to agreements on the topics of agrarian land reform, political participation, and illicit drugs. They are currently discussing reparations for the victims of the armed conflict, with demobilization and an overall peace deal to be discussed in the future.

The sub-committee will work in parallel with the government and the FARC’s negotiation team while currently discussing reparations for the victims of Colombia’s 50-year armed conflict.

Sources

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