The United Nations’ mission chief in Colombia told the country’s foreign minister Carlos Holmes on Wednesday that the country’s war crimes tribunal “deserves respect” and the need for legal certainty for the FARC.
In his briefing before the United Nations Security Council, UN mission chief Jean Arnault expressed his “heightened concern” about the “sense of legal uncertainty” among demobilized FARC guerrillas.
President Ivan Duque has repeatedly vowed to change the powers of the court and Congress on multiple occasions tried to limit its powers to investigate war crimes committed during the armed conflict.
Furthermore, the president of the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) recently accused controversial Prosecutor General Nestor Humberto Martinez last week of “categorically meddling with” the transitional justice court and “intimidating” its judges.
Colombia’s chief prosecutor ‘intimidating’ and ‘categorically meddling with’ war crimes tribunal
UN mission chief: controversies and debate have dogged reintegration
According to Arnault, “the controversies surrounding the peace agreements and the protracted political, legal and constitutional debates over the established special peace jurisdiction” is causing a “sense of legal uncertainty” among the FARC’s 13,000 demobilized members and has “dogged the reintegration process over the couple of years.”
More than 30 FARC leaders have gone off the grid since the election of Duque in June and thousands of former combatants have abandoned the compounds where they were supposed to reintegrate into society.
An increasing number of FARC members appear to have lost faith the Duque administration and other branches of government will honor state commitments made in the 2016 peace deal and have joined rogue guerrilla groups that violently oppose the process.
UN mission chief Jean Arnault
Arnault stressed that the transitional court’s judges “are deserving of the respect and support of state institutions and the full cooperation of all persons under this jurisdiction.”
Colombia’s state and illegal armed groups both threaten peace: UN
Holmes vows state commitment to Colombia’s peace process
Colombia’s foreign minister stressed that “”all high government bodies are committed” to peace, “not just in relation to the FARC’s former fighters, but also to guarantee human rights and the democratic liberties of all Colombians.”
Colombia’s Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes
Holmes urged demobilized guerrilla leaders who have abandoned their reintegration camps to “get back on course one more time and not get lost, once again, on the path of violence and illegality.”
The foreign minister told press that “there is no excuse for ex-combatants to betray their commitment” to the historic peace agreement and warned that those who continue carrying out illegal activity will lose judicial benefits and “receive the full weight of the law.”
The peace process that began in December 2016 seeks to end decades of armed conflict and political violence that cost the lives of more than 210,000 civilians, displaced more than 7.5 million and left another 80,000 missing, according to the National Center for Historic Memory.