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World

Colombia's FARC will meet deadline to hand over weapons, leader promises

The leader of Colombia's Marxist FARC rebel group told Reuters on Thursday that all the group's weapons will be handed over to the United Nations by June 20 as planned, part of a peace deal signed with the government to end more than 52 years of war.

'We respect the agreement and we will implement it, whatever it takes,' Timochenko says

FARC leader Rodrigo Londono Echeverri, also known as Timoleon Jimenez or Timochenko, meets Norwegian Foreign Minister Borge Brende for a conversation about how they achieved peace after 52 years of armed conflict in Colombia, on June 15. (Hakon Mosvold Larsen via Reuters)

The leader of Colombia's Marxist FARC rebel group told Reuters on Thursday that all the group's weapons will be handed over to the United Nations by June 20 as planned, part of a peace deal signed with the government to end more than 52 years of war.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) need to give up the last 40 per cent of their arms, as agreed last year with the government of President Juan Manuel Santos. Nearly 60 per cent of their arms were handed over by Tuesday.

"We have taken the political decision. We respect the agreement and we will implement it, whatever it takes," FARC leader Rodrigo Londono, known as Timochenko, said in an interview.

Under the accord, rejected in a public referendum but pushed through by congress, the FARC will become a political party and most fighters will receive amnesty after explaining their actions publicly.

Londono said the FARC were discussing internally the name of their future political party, which could be ultimately decided at a FARC congress in August.

"We are working with the date of August, the middle or the end of August. It could also be the beginning of September," he said, declining to say which options for names were on the table.

"The Congress will decide all these things ... democratically," he said.

Cocaine plants, landmines a concern

Londono was speaking after discussing the peace process together with Colombian foreign minister Maria Angela Holguin, in a rare joint public appearance outside Colombia by a member of the government and a FARC leader.

Colombian Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin also appeared with the FARC leader at the Oslo event. (Hakon Mosvold Larsen via Reuters)

Asked on stage by Norwegian foreign minister Boerge Brende what the main stumbling blocks were for the peace process, Holguin said that the key was for Colombian farmers to feel they would be better off cultivating legal crops rather than coca, the crop used to produce cocaine.

"We must be able to give farmers the possibility of earning a living legally, instead of cultivating coca. We must substitute crops and remove the landmines," she told the audience.

Colombia ranks second after Afghanistan on the list of countries with the most landmines, according to the NGO International Campaign to Ban Landmines.

"We are in a very difficult phase. Applying the accord is often more complicated than doing the deal in the first place," she said.

Asked the same question, Londono said that reintegrating guerrilla fighters in society was key. Also, "we must remove violence from the exercise of politics," he said.