http://colombiareports.co/peace-collective-process-eln-central-command/
Sep 30, 2013
ELN reaffirms willingness for peace talksposted by Steven Cohen
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The Central Command of the National Liberation Army (ELN) rebel group
published an official announcement Monday reaffirming its willingness to
initiate a formal, transparent peace process with the Colombian government.

Since the release of Canadian hostage Jernoc Wobert in late August, the
government of President Juan Manuel
Santos<http://colombiareports.co/profile-juan-manuel-santos/>has
indicated its willingness to establish negotiations with
Colombia<http://colombiareports.co/>’s
second largest rebel group, along the lines of the one’s currently taking
place in Havana with leaders of the FARC <http://colombiareports.co/farc/>.

Recently, Norway joined a list of several Latin American nations offering
to host any future dialogue. But so far, third-party discussions between
the ELN and the government have yet to produce any official talks.

*MORE:* Norway offers Colombia support in opening dialogue with the
ELN 
<http://colombiareports.co/norway-offers-colombia-government-support-opening-dialogue-eln/>

*MORE:* Brazil, Costa Rica and Venezuela offer to host peace talks with the
ELN<http://colombiareports.co/brazil-costa-rica-venezuela-offered-host-peace-talks-eln/>

Monday’s announcement, then, is the first look at what a potential
negotiation table would look like. In it, the ELN reiterates its
willingness to dialogue, while laying out some of the fundamental
differences that need to be bridged heading into any formal talks with the
government.
------------------------------
An Open Process
------------------------------

For one, the ELN is calling for the entire process, including the buildup
to actual talks, to be made open to the public. Unlike the FARC peace
talks, which the document claims have been “characterized by secrecy”, any
dealings between the ELN and the Santos administration will be broadcast to
the international and national communities, according to the document
released Monday.

The ELN claims it is “convinced” of the “right [of the international and
national communities] to be constructors of peace”, which it called a
necessarily “collective” process, and will, accordingly, encourage the
participation of both the Colombian public and the foreign countries
interested in ending Colombia’s armed conflict.

Before the process can begin, however, the ELN says it has “profound
differences” with the government that need to be addressed.
------------------------------
The Goals
------------------------------

The ELN share the sentiments expressed by various labor bodies in recent
and ongoing national strikes that the Colombian government uses negotiation
as a means to squash conflict, but not as a vehicle to bring solutions to
the causes.

Colombia’s government, according to the ELN, thinks that the country’s
armed conflict is attributable solely to the “existence of guerrillas”, and
therefore views peace talks with rebel groups as a path to “demobilization
and disarmament”.

The ELN, on the other hand, claims Colombia’s “armed and social conflict”,
and the rebel groups behind it, is a “consequence” of other, systemic
issues.

Accordingly, the ELN wants the focus of any negotiations with the
government to be on “discussing the large economic, social and political
problems that originally caused” the armed conflict.

Solving these problems, the document says, is a necessary prerequisite for
any lasting peace.
------------------------------
Politics
------------------------------

When it began over 60 years ago, Colombia’s armed conflict was a Marxist
revolution. Since then, Colombia’s various rebel groups have lost much of
their ideological credibility — because of both their heavy reliance on
exploitive drug and mining operations to finance the conflict and their own
involvement in  widespread human rights violations against the rural
population they supposedly defend.

Still, there is a political element within groups such as the FARC and ELN,
and longstanding stances they maintain against the government because of it.

According to the ELN document, “the road to peace requires a political exit
to the conflict.” Like the FARC, the ELN will be searching for political
representation in the Colombian government.

The ELN is not, it claims, willing to “reinsert itself in the existing
capitalist society” and wait for the government to “implement some
reforms”. Instead, the ELN leadership is calling for a “bilateral dialogue”
with the government, in which both parties collaborate to “design a plan to
overcome the crisis” facing the Colombian countryside and “build a new
country”.

So far, the topic of political representation has been a sticking point in
the Havana talks, with the government unwilling to grant FARC leaders the
permanent political presence they have requested.

The ELN document did not indicate whether ELN leaders expect a guaranteed
political presence, as the FARC’s did, only that the peace and reform
process should include those “historically excluded from [government] power
and decision making”, such as Colombia’s indigenous, afro and rural
populations, all of which have also suffered grievances at the hands of the
ELN itself.
------------------------------
Inclusion
------------------------------

According to Monday’s announcement, the ELN wants any potential dialogue to
include direct representation for Colombia’s “historically excluded” social
and ethnic groups.

The parties involved in the negotiation cannot, it says, “replace the
struggles nor the demands of the masses”. Any negotiation, according to the
ELN, should “engage and include” those masses directly “in the process and
its definition”.

The document does not specify which groups would be included, or who would
be designated to represent them.
------------------------------
Timeframe
------------------------------



The government is already close to surpassing its original time frame for
negotiations with the FARC, which were supposed to end within a year of
last November, when they began in Cuba. Recently, President Santos has
indicated that a deal needs to be finalized in time for next March’s
national elections, so that a referendum can be voted on by the public.

The FARC are opposed to a voter referendum on principle, but also are
opposed to any time limit for negotiations.

Perhaps because of the FARC’s experience navigating shifting talk
deadlines, the ELN are calling for negotiations free of any fixed time
limit.

In Monday’s announcement, ELN leaders referred to the government’s
“relatively short” time frames as “disguises for force”, saying that
limiting negotiations to “determined dates is pernicious and undermines the
success of the peace process”.

Any negotiations, the document said, should be “determined by the progress
of the negotiations themselves” and not by any outside limits.
------------------------------
Still No Announcement
------------------------------

The ELN did not indicate whether the points laid out in its announcement
were concrete demands for a potential peace process or simply an
illustration of its general position.

Either way, intermediary talks between the government and ELN have yet to
lead to any direct contact, or any announcements regarding a formal peace
process.

Government officials declined to comment on the status of any potential
peace talks, reiterating President Santos’ desire to engage the rebels.
Sources

ELN 
Announcement<http://www.eln-voces.com/index.php/en/voces-del-eln/comando-central/665-la-paz-una-obra-colectiva>

--------------------
Sep 30, 2013
Uribe drops all facade and names political party after himselfposted by Taran
Volckhausen <http://tea-vision.tumblr.com/>
[image: Uribe drops all facade and names political party after
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Former Colombia <http://colombiareports.co/> President Alvaro
Uribe<http://colombiareports.co/alvaro-uribe/> on
Monday rechristened his political party, changing the name from “Centro
Democratico” to “Uribe Centro Democratico.”

Uribe Centro Democratico is the party that was formed this election cycle
by Uribe and his followers and focuses on security, international
investors’ confidence in Colombia, conservative fiscal policies and social
cohesion.

The hardliner right-wing party will be challenging Colombian President Juan
Manuel Santos <http://colombiareports.co/profile-juan-manuel-santos/>’s
right-of-center party in the upcoming election.

In addition to changing the name of the party, the new logo features an
image of Uribe with his hand over his heart, looking towards the horizon,
which according to a statement the designer told Caracol Radio, is meant to
appear “as if he were singing the national anthem.”

The party has come under criticism recently for its purported connections
to paramilitary organizations.

Furthermore, a number of “Uribistas” have been calling for the removal of
Uribe’s former adviser Jose Obdulio Gaviria, cousin of former drug lord Pablo
Escobar <http://colombiareports.co/pablo-escobar/>, as senatorial candidate
running with Uribe’s party.

*MORE:* Colombia Liberal senator compares Uribe aide to Nazi propaganda
minister<http://colombiareports.co/colombia-liberal-senator-compares-uribe-aide-nazi-propaganda-minister/>
Sources


   - Nuevamente Cambian El Nombre Del Centro
Democrático<http://www.caracol.com.co/noticias/actualidad/nuevamente-cambian-el-nombre-del-centro-democratico/20130930/nota/1985403.aspx>

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