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News > World

FARC Rebels Could Be Cheesemakers in Post-War Colombia

  • After the signing of the peace deal, the FARC rebels started to demobilize, but are concerned about how they will reenter the job market.

    After the signing of the peace deal, the FARC rebels started to demobilize, but are concerned about how they will reenter the job market. | Photo: Reuters

Published 27 September 2016
Opinion

Ex-fighters could become artisans or tour guides, shepherding visitors around little-explored areas of Colombia's mountains and jungles.

Veterans of Colombia's FARC guerrilla army could soon be making a living as eco-tourism guides, beef processors or cheese makers under plans by the Marxist group to invest in economic projects once a peace deal is finalized.

ANALYSIS:
Afro-Colombians, Indigenous Fear New Pitfalls in Peace Deal

Vast swathes of rural land abandoned for decades because of war will be open to development, including to ex-fighters from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as the FARC, who plan to work on communal farms and other initiatives funded by the group.

President Juan Manuel Santos and top rebel leader Timochenko signed a peace deal Monday, ending a 52-year-old conflict that killed more than 220,000 people and forced millions more from their homes.

The deal will be put to a public vote on Oct. 2 and is expected to be approved.

The economic projects, many planned for the future and some already functioning, will be run by the FARC to provide jobs to some of its 7,000 former fighters.

Financing will come from the FARC's own funds and demobilization money earmarked for individual ex-rebels under the peace agreement.

Many fighters have little education and come from poor, rural families and so need employment options to resist the profitable pull of drug trafficking, kidnapping and extortion.

"We have to be involved in the economy," FARC commander Mauricio Jaramillo told Reuters in the jungle outpost of El Diamante, southern Caqueta province.

"We have to push an assured and positive development so we don't head down the wrong path," he said, declining to expand on specific projects or say how much would be invested.

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Colombia Still Faces Long To-Do List to Make Peace a Reality

Deep social inequality and lack of opportunities for rural Colombians sparked the creation of the FARC in 1964, and many fear disenchanted former rebels will join drug-running crime gangs unless there are economic alternatives.

The FARC's seven-member secretariat, or leadership team, is loathe to acknowledge the existence of already-functioning projects for fear they may be seized by the government to lock down funds for victim reparations, say rebel sources.

Projects allowed under the peace deal are meant to be funded by payments of 8 million pesos (about US$2,700) to demobilized fighters to help them start businesses.

Reuters was not permitted to visit the active projects in Caqueta or surrounding regions, even though FARC members confirmed a milk processor and a bean farm were up and running.

Many fighters say they want to get involved in politics or stay in familiar rural areas working alongside peasant farmers, but FARC business plans also include tourism initiatives and factory projects.

"A tourist could get to see where the secretariat camped during the peace process," said Sebastian Gomez, head of a community organization that wants to partner with the FARC on eco-tourism, during a visit to the group's Yari unit to explain the effort to fighters.

"Nobody knows these areas like the rebels do."

A FARC document reviewed by Reuters shows plans for a dairy plant, cheese factories and farms are already well advanced.

"The factories will be constructed one per region and will be multi-functional in accordance with harvests," the document said. "They will be advised by professionals with relevant experience in Europe."

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