‘Colombia blaming peace deal for government failures’

President Ivan Duque (Image: El Espectador)

Colombia’s far-right government is blaming a 2016 peace deal for its own failures to comply, the country’s largest peace movement wrote the UN Security Council.

In an open letter, “Defendamos la Paz” pointed out to the UN ambassadors that Duque has presided only three meetings of the so-called National Commission for Security Guarantees since he took office in 2018.

The far-right president is obliged to preside this commission once every month to develop policies that would allow the dismantling of paramilitary structures between politicians, businessmen and illegal armed groups.


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Defendamos la Paz stressed how the security situation in former FARC-controlled regions continues to be critical, partly because of the government’s failure to comply, which is monitored by the Security Council.

Defendamos la Paz

Defendamos la Paz stressed that much of the violence is taking place where the National Army has deployed most troops.

Ironically, the government blames the consequences of its own failures on the peace deal, which is fiercely opposed by Duque’s far-right Democratic Center party, according to the peace organization that consists of top politicians and dozens of social organizations.

Defendamos la Paz

Meanwhile, “the onslaught of the government and its party against transitional justice system, that is, against the Peace Agreement, does not stop,” according to Defendamos la Paz.

The peace organization urged the Security Council to take action to prevent a similar political genocide as Colombia suffered in the 1980’s and 1990’s when the security forces and paramilitaries all but exterminated the leftist Patriotic Union party.


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“We respectfully ask you to demand from the Government of Colombia a greater commitment to the Peace Agreement, to its implementation, to the signatories and to the new generations,” said Defendamos la Paz.

The peace deal between the FARC and former President Juan Manuel Santos was signed On November 24, 2016, but has been barely implemented by Duque.

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