This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Colombia’s Farc rebel group has voted unanimously to approve a peace deal with the government and form a new political party at the close of a guerrilla congress.

Colombia's half-century of conflict that led to historic peace deal Read more

After four years of negotiations in Havana, the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia reached a final peace accord last month that will end a five-decade war that has left a quarter of a million people dead.

As part of the agreement, the Farc will continue to push for social change as a political party, receiving 10 unelected seats in congress until 2026. The leadership of the Farc have so far been coy on policy details but are expected soon to transition to a party rooted in Marxist ideals.

“The war is over, long live Colombia, long live peace,” said Farc commander Iván Márquez in a statement to reporters alongside fellow members of the rebel leadership.

“We inform the country and the government and the governments and people of the world that the rebel delegates of the congress have given unanimous backing to the final accord.“

Colombians will vote on the peace accord in a 2 October plebiscite, the final go-ahead for rebels to demobilize. Polls show the accord will easily pass.

Two-hundred delegates from Farc units around the country gathered at the southern Plains of Yarí, five hours by rutted road from the nearest provincial town, to review the accord and discuss re-organization in peacetime.

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Although both leadership and rank-and-file fighters say they will prioritize political activism as civilians, the group has so far not provided examples of specific policies.

“Our initial platform is the implementation of the Havana accords,” Pastor Alape, a member of the Farc’s secretariat and a negotiator at the talks in Cuba, told Reuters at the congress. “Our political proposals will have to come from the suggestions of our base.

“We started our political efforts clandestinely and now we aspire, legally, to open our initiatives, together with all sectors of society, to concretely cultivate the political space we are given,” Alape said.

The five-point peace accord covers agricultural reform, an end to the illegal drugs trade, victims’ reparations, Farc political participation and demobilization.

The Farc may find an electoral foothold among poor farmers and committed leftists, but many Colombians are wary that ex-fighters will join gangs or a smaller rebel group, the National Liberation Army.

