The Colombian government has accepted a trial ceasefire proposal
by the rebel National Liberation Army (ELN), Luis Carlso Restrepo,
the nation's visiting high commissioner for peace said on Wednesday
in Cuban capital Havana.
Colombia's President Alvaro Uribe "has asked me to tell the ELN
we accept their experimental and transitory ceasefire proposal,"
said Restrepo, leader of a government delegation that has held
exploratory conversations with the rebel army, in a bid to begin a
formal peace process.
ELN delegation leader, best known by his alias Pablo Beltran,
had on Monday proposed an immediate end to hostilities, on an
experimental and temporary basis, to create an atmosphere of peace
to help negotiations in this round: the sixth since talks began in
December 2005.
This declaration "helps (us) enormously in beginning the debate
on the complete halt to hostilities, a topic the government has
insisted on and which we consider to be of the highest importance,"
Restrepo said.
The beginning of the ceasefire and how it will be checked remain
to be agreed, however.
The ELN, Colombia's second-largest anti-government organization
after the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, has been fighting
the government since the 1960s. But its forces have dwindled to
fewer than 2,000 fighters from some 4,500 after a series of
military offensives by government forces in recent years.
The country has been locked in a four-decade civil war, the
longest in Latin America, in which government forces, guerrillas
and paramilitaries are fighting one another. The conflicts kill
more than 3,000 people every year.
(Xinhua News Agency April 19, 2007)