Colombia peace talks move to negotiating drug trafficking, coca cultivation

Humberto de la Calle (Photo: President's Office)

Peace talks between Colombia’s government and the country’s largest rebel group FARC resumed Thursday, as discussions moved onto the guerrillas’  involvement in illicit crop cultivation and drug trafficking.

Solutions to drug trafficking and cultivation represents the third, and perhaps most internationally relevant, negotiation point in a six point peace process that started over a year ago in Havana, Cuba. Negotiators have already reached tentative compromises on the issues of political participation and land reform.

MORE: 365 days after talks began: Colombia continues on precarious path towards peace

Drug trafficking and taxation, along with kidnapping ransoms, has been a principal means of financing for the FARC since the 1980s – although the rebel continue to deny involvement in the illicit trade.

Political analyst Fernando Giraldo told newspaper El Pais that this negotiation point offers an opportunity for the FARC to prove their seriousness about pursuing peace and to be “generous with the Colombian people.”

Security expert John Marulanda said that because of the massive amount of money involved in drug trafficking, the negotiation point may prove difficult to negotiate.

Humberto De la Calle, chief peace negotiator from the government, said that the eradication of coca in Colombia is an “objective not only important for [Colombia], but also the international community.”

MORE: ‘We want a Colombia without coca’ : Chief govt peace negotiator

“There will be no real end to the conflict without tackling this phenomenon at its roots, as we won’t be able to design a sustainable agrarian reform without solving the problem of the illicit drugs,” said De la Calle.

The FARC had already released a proposal that stemmed from failed peace talks held between 1999 and 2002 in which the guerrillas propose active rebel involvement in helping coca farmers move to substitute crops, while promoting investment in coca-growing region from countries with high cocaine consumption like the United States.

MORE: FARC Proposes Active Role For Guerrillas In Coca Crop Substitution Project

The FARC’s abandoning of drug trafficking activities is the third of six points being discussed by the rebels and the government in Cuba where negotiators have been together for over a year. If successful, the peace talks will put an end to nearly 50 years of conflict that killed more than 220,000 Colombians.

Colombia is one of the world’s largest producers of coca, a crop whose revenue has fueled the conflict since the 1980s.

Sources

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