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WIDER IMAGE-Colombia's FARC rebels give up guns in disarmament camps

by Reuters
Friday, 31 March 2017 14:00 GMT

FARC members walk to get breakfast in a camp near the transitional zone of Pueblo Nuevo, Colombia, February 5, 2017. REUTERS/Federico Rios

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Around 8,000 weapons have been handed over to the United Nations. The rebels are expected to turn in all arms by June

MOUNTAINS OF CAUCA, Colombia March 31 (Reuters) - Former fighters from Colombia's FARC rebel group are handing over thousands of weapons and other materials to international officials in special camps, as the group's six-month disarmament process continues.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) signed a peace agreement with the government late last year to put an end to their part in Latin America's longest-running armed conflict, which has killed more than 220,000 people and displaced millions.

Around 8,000 weapons have been handed over to the United Nations to be stored in secure containers until they can be turned into three memorial statues. The rebels are expected to turn in all arms by June.

A FARC member gets ready for a morning formation in a camp near the transitional zone of Pueblo Nuevo, Colombia, February 4, 2017. REUTERS/Federico Rios

Members of the Jacobo Arenas rebel unit, which operated in mountains of Cauca province, were among 6,900 FARC fighters who left behind clandestine camps where they had lived for decades, crisscrossing the country on foot, by boat and by truck to get to 26 zones monitored by the U.N.

The zones will be their homes for the foreseeable future as they complete judicial processes to determine whether they will serve special sentences for war crimes or receive amnesty. Ex-fighters will also reunite with long-lost families and make amends to victims.

Under the terms of the peace accord, the FARC, which began as a peasant uprising 52 years ago, is to form a political movement in the South American nation.

A FARC member participates in works to build facilities for a camp near the transitional zone of Pueblo Nuevo in the Cauca mountains, Colombia, February 4, 2017. REUTERS/Federico Rios

The FARC's leadership has raised concerns about conditions in some of the camps, including the lack of permanent toilets and facilities such as gyms they say were agreed in the accord.

Some FARC members have told local media they will not hand over their weapons until the camps are more habitable for fighters, who are well used to rough-and-tumble living conditions in poverty-stricken rural areas.

The government says it is working as quickly as possible to finish each camp, that the FARC is partly responsible for construction and that the facilities are far superior to the tarp and bamboo lean-tos traditionally used by the rebels.

FARC members rest after a soccer match in Los Robles, Colombia, January 25, 2017. REUTERS/Federico Rios

The accord has been heavily criticized for sparing rebels jail time for crimes committed during the conflict. A first version was narrowly rejected in a referendum last year, before being modified and passed by Congress.

Authorities have said that about 300 rebels have refused to demobilize, but that may not be a full count, excluding so-called "militants" who worked undercover in cities and towns to help the FARC.

(Reporting by Bogota newsroom; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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