UN OKs mission to monitor future cease-fire in Colombia

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) – The U.N. Security Council on Monday unanimously approved a resolution to establish a political mission to monitor and verify a future cease-fire in Colombia that would end Latin America’s longest-running guerrilla conflict.

The resolution welcomes the progress in negotiations between Colombia’s government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and notes their joint request last week for a U.N. monitoring mission.

The request sent a strong signal that a March deadline to wrap up peace talks could be within reach.

The resolution establishes a political mission for 12 months, and the council can consider an extension if asked by the two parties. The mission will be made up of unarmed observers from Latin American and Caribbean nations.

Decades of fighting between guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries and the armed forces has left more than 220,000 dead, some 40,000 disappeared and over 5 million driven from their homes.

“It isn’t common for a country to refer itself to the council. But it’s exactly the kind of role the United Nations should be playing” in conflict resolution, British Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said. “I hope today will mark the start of the final stage of peace talks.”

The resolution notes that the Colombian government and the FARC foresee a final peace agreement including “a tripartite mechanism” – comprising the government, FARC and an “international component” – to monitor a cessation of hostilities and the laying down of arms. It recognizes that the two sides have asked the U.N. to participate as the “international component.”

The resolution asks U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to present detailed recommendations on the political mission’s size and operation to the council for its approval within 30 days of a cease-fire.

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power warned, however, that plenty of work lies ahead, including the removal of land mines and the re-integration of fighters into the population.

Though nominally Marxist at its founding, the FARC’s ideology has never been well defined. It has sought to make the conservative oligarchy share power and prioritized land reform in a country where more than 5 million people have been forcibly displaced, mostly by far-right militias in the service of ranchers, businessmen and drug traffickers.

The FARC lost popularity as it turned to kidnapping, extortion and taxes on cocaine production and illegal gold mining to fund its insurgency.

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