Returning to war with ELN would put Colombia in ‘grave danger’: think tank

(Image: ELN)

If Colombia’s President-elect Ivan Duque returns to war with ELN rebels this would put the country in “grave danger” and come at a “high cost” the International Crisis Group (ICG) said Thursday.

In a report, the think tank that investigates violent conflict urged the international community “to stress to Duque the grave dangers of returning to conflict” and prevent a resumption of a crime-fueled war of more than half a century.

Duque, an inexperienced dynasty politician, recently rejected continuing peace talks that were initiated by his predecessor, outgoing President Juan Manuel Santos.

ELN territory (Source: Indepaz)

Poverty and violence rates dropped to record lows last year after Santos bartered a deal with the FARC guerrilla group that controlled one third of Colombia and demobilized 14,000 people.

Corruption has virtually paralyzed Colombia’s state system, however, making peace elusive in many rural areas and urban peripheries that were abandoned by the FARC.

Not the rule of law, but the rule of the ELN, far-right war lords, or political mafias is imposed in much of Colombia.

The Colombian hard line

Duque and Uribe have threatened to end talks that were started by outgoing President Juan Manuel Santos. But according to the ICG, “the costs to the country of resuming war would be high” with virtually no chance of defeating the guerrilla organization with sheer force.

International Crisis Group

The ICG urged the United Nations and foreign governments that support the talks “to stress to Duque the grave dangers of returning to conflict.”

The ELN’s decades-old safe havens in neighboring Venezuela, growing involvement in drug trafficking, and decentralized structure makes the group virtually impossible to defeat.

International Crisis Group

Increasing ELN violence

When entering office on August 7, Duque is going to be confronted with ELN violence that has expanded since 2012, the year that Santos began peace talks with the FARC.

Colombia’s incoming president prefers the hard-line of his controversial political patron, former President Alvaro Uribe, but “that is unlikely to work.”

International Crisis Group

Data provided by the ICG showed that the security forces have maintained activity against the ELN, but that homicides and fighting with other illegal armed groups have increased.

More than 311 social leaders have been assassinated since 2016 amid the state’s failures to effectively exist in many rural areas.

So far this year, the ELN has been fighting rival groups more than it was fighting the state, according to the ICG.

Violence involving ELN

The ELN “does not constitute a national insurgent threat, but its regional units exert firm territorial control over increasingly large parts of Colombia’s peripheries, in which they perpetrate a great deal of violence,” said the think tank.

International Crisis Group

Compared to 2012, 57% more municipalities experienced ELN-related violence this year. The ELN is currently active in more than 10% of the country, the ICG’s data showed.

Municipalities with ELN activity

How to win a guerrilla war?

According to the ICG, “the ELN stands out for its resilience in modern-day Colombia,” partly because of the country’s lucrative informal economy and because to its forces can easily move in and out of neighboring country Venezuela.

International Crisis Group

Furthermore, “the safety and protection the guerrillas have historically enjoyed [in Venezuela] will continue to work to their advantage.”

International Crisis Group

The peace talks with the ELN, disapproved of by Duque and the majority of Colombia’s voters, are more likely to effectively end the ELN’s “armed resistance,” and allow the state to effectively control its territory for the first time in more than half a century.

Related posts

Colombia’s prosecution confirms plea deal with jailed former UNGRD chiefs

Arsonists set home of Colombia’s land restitution chief on fire

Colombia and Russia “reactivate” bilateral ties