FARC, ELN ‘join forces’ to fight foreign companies

Camilo Gonzalez Posso, president of the conflict-monitoring NGO, INDEPAZ, told Colombia Reports the ELN-FARC alliances were a part of a regional strategy by the two rebel groups to strike against the economically vital oil sector.

“Especially in Arauca there have been joint actions of the FARC and ELN against oil companies, the statistic registers indicate that sabotages against oil pipelines and infrastructure have increased, there are also antecedents…of armed strikes, these have implications, impacts and motives of alert not only in Arauca, which has been a traditional region of alliance between these organizations,” said Gonzalez.

Gonzalez also said collaboration between the two groups could have to do with the ELN’s absence at the ongoing FARC-government peace talks in Havana, Cuba.

“I think there has been a process of convergence, above all in the zones where the ELN has a presence, like Arauca, Antioquia, Casanare and the Pacific coast of Nariño, where they have twice the influence. On the one hand they are military alliances, but on the other hand it is an approach that could mean something in the context of the Havana accords or parallel negotations with the ELN,” said Gonzalez.

MORE: Colombia’s ELN rebels ‘ready for peace’: Leader

This is not the first time that rebels from Colombia’s largest rebel groups have announced regional alliances. In February, an ELN communique said the two rebel groups would fight together against the large-scale mining sector in the northwestern Antioquia department.

MORE: ELN announces ‘alliance’ with FARC in northwestern Colombia

FARC and ELN were for many years engaged in bloody turf wars against each other until the leadership of both groups announced the intent to construct a nationwide alliance in 2009.

MORE: FARC and ELN uniting

“We call on the fighters, militants, all the revolutionaries of both forces, to assume with and dedication the unified Bolivarian spirit of our commanders Manuel Marulanda Velez [founder of the FARC] and Manuel Perez Martinez [founder of the ELN], turning the pain into force; the challenge of today is to strengthen the Popular Revolutionary Bloc [to] confront the big oligopolies, transnational capital and imperialism,” the statement concluded.

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