Colombia’s Farc rebels suspend unilateral ceasefire

Tensions rise at peace talks after government troops kill 26 Farc fighters

Colombia's Marxist Farc rebels suspended a unilateral ceasefire after government troops killed 26 of its fighters, the guerrilla group said on Friday, a move that will likely ratchet up tension at peace talks to end five decades of war.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or Farc, said it lifted the ceasefire because of the attack, one of the deadliest confrontations since the two sides began negotiations in Cuba at the end of 2012.

The insurgent group accused President Juan Manuel Santos of "incoherence" in seeking peace while his military continued attacks against Farc encampments.

The rebel ceasefire had been in place since late December.

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“The suspension of the unilateral ceasefire was not in our sights . . . but the incoherence of Santos’s government has achieved it,” Farc said on its website.

"Dialogue will continue," rebel negotiator Pablo Catatumbo said in Havana. "There is a tense atmosphere that has tarnished the talks these days."

The Farc statement repeated the group’s demand that the government also declare a ceasefire “for the health” of the process and to prevent further casualties.

Mr Santos has refused to halt offensives until peace is signed.

Minutes before the rebel statement, Mr Santos urged the group in a televised address to accelerate the pace of talks. He encouraged an end to the “spiral of violence, hate and vengeance” and praised the armed forces for their efforts.

The bombing raid and ground combat that killed the 26 at their jungle camp took place in the key drug-trafficking region of Cauca where Farc has a strong presence.

“The rebels will be thinking about retaliation,” Mr Santos said, standing beside his military leadership in Bogota. “What we have to do is stop; stop and transform it into a spiral of forgiveness and reconciliation.”

Peace talks to halt a conflict that has killed more than 220,000 people and displaced millions have so far resulted in partial agreement on three items on a five-point agenda.

The rebel deaths come a month after Farc killed 11 soldiers in the same region, prompting the government to restart bombing raids on guerrilla camps after a brief suspension. At the time Farc called the incident a legitimate case of self-defence in reaction to an offensive by government troops. – (Reuters)