Colombia govt seeks ceasefire with ELN but keeps negotiator in Bogota

The Colombian government’s chief negotiator said Thursday that he seeks to resume a ceasefire with ELN guerrillas, but will stay in Bogota until after Saturday.

Chief negotiator Gustavo Bell returned from Quito, Ecuador to meet with President Juan Manuel Santos after his predecessor and guerrillas failed to secure the extension of a ceasefire with the Marxist group.

The ELN carried out at least three attacks on Wednesday after the warring parties failed to agree to extend the first bilateral ceasefire in the guerrilla group’s history.

The army reported there had been 13 guerrilla attacks and attempted attacks between Wednesday and Friday. At least one soldiers was killed. Two others were injured.

International pressure

The international community has put pressure on both the Colombian government and the ELN to cease attacks and continue negotiating an end to the group’s half-a-century revolt.

The United Nations chief in Colombia, Jean Arnault, said Thursday he will “closely follow” the process.


United Nations Security Council

The European Union said Friday the attacks were “unacceptable” and urged a resumption of negotiations.


European Union

Negotiator waiting for permission

According to the chief negotiator, he will stay in Bogota until the president tells him to join his fellow negotiators and guerrilla representatives.


Chief negotiator Gustavo Bell

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres will meet with Santos and Bell while visiting the Colombian capital for a briefing on the country’s efforts to demobilize multiple guerrilla groups after decades of violence.

The group that was Colombia’s largest guerrilla group, the FARC, demobilized more than 14,000 fighters last year and is taking part in a fragile peace process.

Hundreds of observers are in Colombia to monitor this peace process. Until Tuesday they also monitored the ELN ceasefire.

The expired ceasefire had been marred by incidents, but significantly improved the humanitarian situation in ELN-controlled territory, more than 150 social leaders said in a statement.

The talks are stuck on whether the ceasefire should be extended or a definite truce be negotiated.

ELN puts foot down

The guerrillas’ chief negotiator, “Pablo Beltran,” defended his group’s resumption of attacks, claiming the army had attacked guerrilla camps twice during the ceasefire.


ELN chief negotiator ‘Pablo Beltran’

The resumed guerrilla violence has elevated tensions at three months of congressional elections.

The unpopular peace process with the FARC has been high on the electoral agenda and are complicated further by the ELN’s recent attacks.

Bell said he hoped to reach a peace deal with the guerrillas before the end of Santos’ term in August. Conservative candidates have shown little affection with a negotiated end to the armed conflict.

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