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Colombia postpones ELN talks over hostage dispute

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AFP Bogota
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos postponed peace talks with the ELN rebels today, hours before they were due to open, insisting they first release an ex-lawmaker being held hostage.

Santos, who won the Nobel Peace Prize this month, said the government remained committed to making peace but would not budge from its demand for the ELN to first release former congressman Odin Sanchez.

"The formal installation of the negotiating table with (the ELN) is postponed until they release Odin Sanchez safe and sound," Santos said in a speech.

He said he had ordered the government's negotiating team to "suspend" its trip to the Ecuadoran capital Quito, where the talks had been due to formally open at 5:00 pm (2200 GMT).
 

Earlier, Interior Minister Juan Fernando Cristo said the government was prepared to reschedule the start of talks to Friday, Saturday "or whenever we are certain that Odin Sanchez has been freed."

The National Liberation Army (ELN) is Colombia's second-largest rebel group after the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), which has been in talks with the government for nearly four years.

The ELN talks are meant to open a new, decisive front in Santos's efforts to end an armed conflict that has lasted more than half a century and killed more than 260,000 people.

Santos has already signed a peace deal with the FARC, but voters rejected it in a referendum this month - sending negotiators back to the drawing board.

And the ELN talks are shaping up to be even trickier.

The ELN had promised to free its hostages before the talks - as the FARC did before starting negotiations in Cuba in 2012.

But it bristled last week when the government's chief negotiator, Juan Camilo Restrepo, gave it an ultimatum to free Sanchez. The ELN accused Restrepo of "torpedoing" the talks.

Since then, there has been no news on the fate of the hostage - or hostages, according to some sources - still being held by the leftist guerrillas.

Sanchez voluntarily went into ELN custody in April to take the place of his brother Patrocinio, a former governor who had fallen ill after three years in captivity.

Sources in the Catholic Church, which has played a part in preliminary negotiations, say the rebels are also holding a doctor named Edgar Torres.

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First Published: Oct 28 2016 | 1:42 AM IST

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