Kolumbien
Kolumbien | Südamerika und KaribikZIF kompakt
ZIF kompakt spezial | Diese Woche im Sicherheitsrat: UNVMC | 09/2019
Aktuelle Einsätze
UN Verification Mission in Colombia
Mandatiert seit: 07/17
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MAPP
OEA Misión de Apoyo al Proceso de Paz en Colombia - OAS Mission to Support the Peace Process in Colombia (Other)
Beginn: 02/04
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News
The government of Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro said Wednesday the security forces will resume attacks against ELN guerrillas. The decision followed an announcement of the guerrillas in which they refused to an immediate bilateral ceasefire together with four other illegal armed groups.
Colombia’s largest remaining guerrilla group has contradicted government claims that they had agreed a national ceasefire, in a setback to plans to bring peace to the Andean nation after decades of violence.
The agreement between the Colombian Government and the five largest remaining armed groups there provides “renewed hope for comprehensive peace” into the new year, said the UN chief in a statement released by his Spokesperson late on Sunday.
[…] Six years after the signing of the Final Agreement, crucial sections have been unevenly implemented, despite their potential to address the underlying causes of the conflict and redress historic inequalities.
Colombia’s illegal armed groups are increasingly moving their violence from the countryside to the country’s cities, according to a leading think tank on the armed conflict.
The Colombian government and National Liberation Army (ELN) rebels on Monday "successfully" completed a first round of peace talks in Caracas by agreeing to free prisoners, but without signing a cease fire, according to a joint statement.
Peace talks between Colombia's government and the ELN rebel group have reached a first point of agreement, the country's president has said. … Both sides have agreed that indigenous people displaced by the conflict should be guaranteed safe return to their lands in the province, he said.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro said that “time for peace has arrived” as dignitaries from the Colombian government and the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrillas started their ceasefire talks in Caracas Monday.
Colombia’s Congress on Wednesday approved a law to allow president Gustavo Petro to seek peace deals with leftist rebels and criminal groups tied to drug trafficking via negotiations and processes of surrender.
Colombia’s Congress approved a bill that allows President Gustavo Petro to negotiate the dismantling of illegal armed groups. The bill gives Petro congressional support for his ambitious “Total Peace” policy, which seeks to reduce violence caused by illegal armed groups and organized crime.