Colombia suspends Farc peace talks over kidnapping Published duration 17 November 2014

image copyright AFP image caption Questions are being asked about Gen Alzate Mora's presence in the area

Colombia has suspended peace talks with the Farc rebel group after the apparent kidnapping of an army general.

Brig Gen Ruben Dario Alzate Mora was abducted by rebels in the northern province of Choco on Sunday, army officials said.

President‎ Juan Manuel Santos demanded that his captors free Brig Gen Alzate "safe and sound".

The Farc and the government have been holding peace talks for two years but have not declared a ceasefire.

"Tomorrow negotiators were to travel to another round of talks in Havana," Reuters quoted President Santos as saying late on Sunday.

"I will tell them not to go and that the talks are suspended until these people are released."

image copyright AP image caption The Farc is the largest rebel group in Colombia

Explanation demand

Brig Gen Alzate was travelling along the Atrato river in the northern Choco province by boat.

He stopped at a village called Las Mercedes, about 15km (10 miles) from the provincial capital Quibdo to talk to the local community.

image copyright Getty Images image caption President‎ Santos was re-elected on a promise of driving the peace process forward

He was met there by rebels thought to belong to the 34th division of the Farc, reports say.

The rebels searched him and took him and two other people - lawyer Gloria Urrego and Corporal Jorge Rodriguez Contreras - captive, the army said. ‎

‎President Santos said he had asked his defence minister to travel to Choco on Monday "to investigate Brig Gen Alzate's kidnapping".

media caption Yineth Trujillo fought with Farc for three years: she was 12 years old

‎Writing on Twitter, President Santos also demanded an explanation from the defence minister as to what Brig Gen Alzate was doing in an area of high rebel activity dressed in civilian clothes. ‎

‎More than two years ago, the Farc announced they would stop their policy of kidnapping people in order to show their good will ahead of peace negotiations.

But after seizing two soldiers recently in eastern Arauca province they clarified that that policy applied only to civilians, not to military targets.

An estimated 220,000 people have died in five decades of armed conflict in Colombia. ‎

President Santos was re-elected on a promise of driving the peace process forward, but Colombians are getting increasingly impatient with the slow pace of progress at the peace talks.