FARC leader Rodrigo Londoño fiercely criticized the demobilized guerrillas’ former chief peace negotiator “Ivan Marquez” of the party founded as part of a peace process.
Timochenko’s fierce letter to his former second-in command comes just days after Marquez told fellow FARC members on Twitter that surrendering weapons as part of the peace deal was a mistake.
Londoño reiterated that after decades of guerrilla warfare and two and a half year of peace process, the FARC is now “a party of peace, and we will never be a party of war.”
Media reported that the FARC’s former negotiators had been expelled from the party, but this was not true, said Senator Julian Gallo on Friday, admitting there was a rift between the party and the former guerrillas’ former chief peace negotiators.
Senator Julian Gallo
Marquez and his former brother in arms “El Paisa” went underground last year after the arrest of Jesus Santrich on a vague US extradition request. An unknown number of mid-level commanders have followed their example.
The country’s war crimes tribunal ruled there was no evidence to prove whether or when the FARC’s former ideologue would have conspired to traffic drugs as claimed by the US Department of Justice and ordered his immediate release last week on Wednesday.
When the FARC leader was released two days later, prosecutors immediately arrested “Santrich” again, claiming they had received new evidence from the United States’ Drug Enforcement Agency.
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From his hideout, the FARC’s former peace negotiator responded furiously and reiterated an earlier statement that it had been a mistake to have surrender the guerrillas’ weapons.
“Ivan Marquez”
While not directly calling on the guerrillas to arm, Marquez’ message dropped a proverbial bomb on the FARC and has now apparently split the former guerrilla group in two.
Londoño, who was known as “Timochenko” when he was the FARC’s military commander, said that not Marquez, but the FARC’s political party was the authority.
Previous to Marquez’ message, the former guerrilla commander had already called on FARC members to be “guarantors of peace.”
FARC chief begs former guerrillas not to abandon peace process amid worst crisis yet
Rodrigo Londoño
What the exact consequences are of Santrich’ recapture and Marquez’ regret is entirely uncertain as the events of the past week have plunged the peace process in its biggest crisis yet.
Of the 13,000 FARC members who demobilized, some 9,000 former guerrillas moved into 26 reintegration camps called ECTRs where they disarmed. But because of the government’s almost chronic failures to comply with the peace deal, More than 80% of these men and women have left.
According to the military, at least 1,700 FARC members have either dissented with the peace process or have rearmed. Other organizations monitoring the process have estimated this number to to as high as 3,000.