Colombia rejects international commitment to allow ELN rebel leaders to reunite with troops

ELN sign at the National University in Bogota (Image: Parker Crooks)

Colombia’s government is refusing to meet its international commitments, insisting that President Ivan Duque can end peace talks with ELN guerrillas without allowing rebel leaders reunite with their troops.

The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo that it will fulfill its commitments and facilitate the return of ELN peace negotiators as agreed with Colombia’s previous head of state, former President Juan Manuel Santos.

Norway’s Foreign Ministry

If peace talks end, Colombia has two weeks to allow ELN leaders to reunite with troops


The ELN has implicitly acknowledged that it carried out a terrorist attack that killed 21 people and injured 68 in Bogota last week. Duque implicitly broke off talks on Friday.

Following the attack on the General Santander police academy, the president and his foreign minister have refused to acknowledge their government’s international commitments and have asked the government of Cuba, the host country of the talks, to arrest and extradite ELN peace negotiators.

The Cuban government has refused to do this and said that, like Norway, it will respect the rupture protocol that obligates all parties to allow ELN peace negotiators to safely reunite with their troops.


Duque wants Cuba to violate international agreements and surrender ELN peace negotiators


The Norwegian government’s announcement is a major diplomatic blow for Duque and Trujillo, who responded that Bogota refuses to acknowledge its international commitments and in particularly the agreed protocols to allow ELN leaders to return to Colombia.

Foreign minister, Carlos Holmes Trujillo

According to Trujillo, the government can ignore state obligations because the current administration “never signed any protocol with the ELN.”

House Representative Juanita Goebertus, (Green Alliance) said the government was lying and pointed out that no head of state can exempt himself from from meeting state obligations.

The refusal of the Colombian government to comply with its commitments could further damage the country’s already shaky international reputation, make future peace talks impossible and threaten a peace process with the FARC that was also signed by Santos on behalf of the state.

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