FARC peace deal at risk as conservative Duque wins Colombia presidency

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BOGOTA, June 18, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Conservative Ivan Duque won Colombia’s
presidential election Sunday after a campaign that turned into a referendum
on a landmark 2016 peace deal with FARC rebels that he pledged to overhaul.

Duque, 41, polled 54 percent to his leftist rival Gustavo Petro’s 42
percent with almost all the votes counted, electoral authority figures
showed.

Petro, a leftist former mayor and ex-guerrilla, supports the deal.

Tensions over the deal became apparent in the immediate aftermath of
Duque’s victory, after the president-elect lost no time in pledging
“corrections” to the peace deal.

“That peace we long for — that demands corrections — will have
corrections, so that the victims are the center of the process, to guarantee
truth, justice and reparation,” Duque told supporters in his victory speech
at his campaign headquarters.

“The time has come to build real change,” Duque said, promising a future
for Colombians “of lawfulness, freedom of enterprise and equity,” after
decades of conflict.

His vanquished opponent Petro promised to resist any fundamental changes to
the deal.

“Our role is not to be impotent and watch it being destroyed,” he said.

FARC, which disarmed and transformed into a political party after the peace
deal but did not contest the election, immediately called on Duque to show
“good sense” in dealing with the agreement.

“What the country demands is an integral peace, which will lead us to the
hoped-for reconciliation,” the FARC said in a statement after Duque’s
presidential win.

The former rebels also called for an early meeting with Duque.

“One of the big questions here is what’s going to happen with the peace
process,” analyst Yann Basset of the University of Rosario told AFP.

“He has said he will not end the agreement, but that he will make
modifications, and it’s not very clear what these changes will be.”

– Momentous elections –

“These are momentous elections,” President Juan Manuel Santos, who will
step down in August, said as he cast his ballot early in the day.

“Let us continue to build a country at peace, a country of democracy, a
country which we all hold dear and to which we all contribute.”

His efforts to end the war with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) brought him the Nobel Peace Prize, though he is leaving office with
record unpopularity in a country of 49 million people.

The world’s leading producer of cocaine, the Latin American country
continues to battle armed groups vying for control of lucrative narco-
trafficking routes in areas FARC once dominated.

Duque’s victory means he will be Colombia’s youngest president since 1872.

He comfortably won the first round last month, having campaigned on a
pledge to rewrite the agreement signed by Santos.

As he voted surrounded by his children, Duque said he wanted to make sure
that those who commit crimes “pay for them.”

The former economist and first-term senator says he wants to keep ex-FARC
rebels from serving in Congress. The agreement allowed the group to transform
itself into a political party.

Duque is buoyed by the backing of his popular mentor, former president and
now senator Alvaro Uribe, whose two-term presidency from 2002-2010 was marked
by all-out war on the FARC.

Petro, 58, was the first leftist to reach a presidential runoff in
Colombia, and believed his presence showed the South American country had
shed its suspicions of the left, tainted by 50 years of conflict.

“The need to change things is fundamental,” he said after voting.

“We are going to build a humane Colombia that is at peace, that is
reconciled with itself.”

A former member of the disbanded M-19 guerrilla group, Petro had promised
to implement the agreement with the FARC, whose 7,000 ex-combatants have
struggled to return to civilian life.

FARC leader Rodrigo Londono, known as Timochenko during the conflict, said:
“With either one of the two (candidates), we cannot let down our guard.”

Highlighting Colombia’s glaring inequalities during his campaign, Petro
also said he would buy out land owned by the big agro-industrial companies
and redistribute it to poor farmers.

Polls closed at 4:00 pm (2100 GMT) after a day of peaceful voting.

– ‘We are in limbo’ –

“The biggest challenge will be to adopt a clear position on the peace
agreement because, for the moment, we are in limbo,” Fabian Acuna, professor
of political science at Colombia’s Javeriana University, told AFP.

“It will be very costly to go backwards,” Acuna warned.

According to Andres Ortega of National University, Duque will “arrive with
a very strong coalition in Congress,” where the right swept the polls in
March legislative elections.

The FARC withdrew from the presidential elections, having suffered a
drubbing in its first electoral contest as a political party in March,
polling less than half a percent.

It still gets 10 seats in Congress as a result of the peace agreement — a
clause Duque is intent on scrapping.