HAVANA (Reuters) – US Secretary of State John Kerry was encouraged by progress in the Colombian peace process after meeting yesterday in Havana with representatives of Colombia’s Marxist FARC guerrilla group and the Bogota government, a State Department spokesman said.
Kerry, in Havana as part of US President Barack Obama’s historic visit to the Communist-run island, met the two sides separately and called for them to redouble their efforts to resolve the remaining issues in the talks, spokesman Mark Toner said in a statement.
Kerry told both sides he was “encouraged that the ‘end of conflict’ issues are now front and center in the negotiations, including a formal bilateral ceasefire monitored by the UN Security Council, a timetable for disarmament, and security guarantees post-conflict for all lawful political actors,” according to the statement.
His involvement at the request of Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos marked the first time a US secretary of state had met with negotiators from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia since peace talks started in Havana more than three years ago.
Washington designated the FARC a foreign terrorist organization in 1997, and many of its leaders have been indicted in the United States on charges of cocaine trafficking. The United States sees the Colombian peace talks hosted by Cuba as an example of how restoring normal relations with Havana can help it achieve its wider goals in Latin America.
The Colombian war is the region’s longest-running conflict, with some 220,000 people killed and millions of others displaced since 1964.