Colombians shock government, rejecting peace deal

AFP photo

Colombians hit their government with a shock defeat on Oct. 2 when they voted by a razor-thin majority to reject a historic peace accord with communist FARC rebels.

Voters resentful of the blood shed by the FARC narrowly defied the government's bid to put the 52-year conflict behind them, reversing the trend of earlier opinion polls.
 
The result threw Colombia's future into uncertainty. The sides spent four years negotiating the deal and agreed it must be ratified in a referendum -- but said there was no Plan B.
 
The 'No' camp won by about 54,000 votes which translated into a lead of less than half a percentage point, electoral authorities said.
 
President Juan Manuel Santos admitted defeat in the vote but vowed: "I will not give in, and I will continue to seek peace to the last day of my term."  

FARC chief Rodrigo Londono, alias Timoleon "Timochenko" Jimenez, vowed his side too was committed to continuing peace efforts. He said its ceasefire remained in force.
 
"The FARC deeply deplores that the destructive power of those who sow hatred and resentment has influenced the Colombian people's opinion," he said in a speech in Havana, Cuba, where the accord was negotiated.    

"The people of Colombia who dream of peace can count on us. Peace will triumph."          

Supporters of the accord had expected it to effectively end what is seen as the last major armed conflict in the Western hemisphere.
 
But Oct. 2 evening's result was a dramatic defeat for Santos and the accord he signed with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
 
Commentators compared the drama of the result to that of June's surprise "Brexit" vote for Britain to leave the European Union.
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