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Peace needs at least 15 years: Colombian president
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) June 1, 2018

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos hailed Friday the peace accord reached in his country, but warned it would take at least 15 years to build a truly peaceful society.

Speaking before the UN Labour Organization's annual assembly, Santos stressed that "peace is much more than just silencing the weapons."

"Building peace is like building a cathedral; it is a long and complex process that takes time. Brick by brick. And we are just getting started," he added.

Santos, who won the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end a half-century of armed conflict with the former rebel movement FARC, said this would require "political, economic and social dimensions" that would take at least 15 years.

Santos and FARC leader Rodrigo Londono, better known as Timoleon "Timochenko" Jimenez, signed a deal in November 2016 to end the conflict.

But peace talks are still underway with the country's last active rebel force, the National Liberation Army (ELN), in Cuba.

Santos said he wanted to see "complete peace" in his country, where more than 260,000 people have been killed, nearly 83,000 remain missing and some 7.4 million have been forced to flee their homes over the past 50 years of conflict.

The fragile peace agreement could however be upended when Santos steps down in August.

Last Sunday, hardline conservative candidate Ivan Duque won the first round of Colombia's presidential elections and is favourite to defeat leftist Gustavo Petro in the June 17 run-off.

Duque has vowed to rewrite the FARC deal, which he believes is too lenient on the former guerrillas, and has expressed reservations about the negotiations with the ELN.


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Seismometer readings could offer debris flow early warning
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First came the fire, then the rain - and finally, the devastating mud. In the wake of the largest wildfire in California's history, the December 2017 Thomas Fire, a powerful storm dumped about five inches of rain on the denuded hillsides of Santa Barbara county, triggering debris flows on January 9 that killed 21 people and destroyed hundreds of homes in the Montecito and San Ysidro Creek areas. Seismologists at Caltech noticed that the rumble and roar of the mudslide was detected by a seismometer ... read more

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