The announcement that FARC rebels were excluded from the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos on Friday was met with some shock and outrage by observers who argued it was a “cowardly” move on the part of the committee.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the prize to the conservative president for his efforts “to bring the country’s more than 50-year-long civil war to an end.”
While not naming FARC leader Rodrigo Londoño Echeverri (also known as “Timochenko”), the committee said that the award should “be seen as a tribute to the Colombian people who, despite great hardships and abuses, have not given up hope of a just peace, and to all the parties who have contributed to the peace process.”
“The only prize we aspire to is #PeaceWithSocialJustice for a #Colombia free of paramilitary violence, revenge and lies #PeaceTakeTheStreets.”
—Timochenko
The announcement comes just days after voters rejected the landmark peace accord, though both the conservative president and the Marxist rebel group have said they remain committed to the process.
As Slate columnist Joshua Keating observed, “In past awards given in recognition of peace deals, the leaders of both sides have typically been awarded.” But including Timochenko would have “enraged” those “who see the deal as too lenient.”
Click Here: camiseta river plate
The successful campaign against the peace agreement was led by a ruling elite, which included former president Alvaro Uribe and big landowners. As Jacobin‘s Ronan Burtenshaw noted on social media after the vote, “Colombia’s right is not afraid of FARC, it’s afraid popular demands on land reform, resources & trade deals no longer countered by violence.”
While some argued that overlooking Timochenko was a “tactical” move on the part of the Nobel Committee—which specifically said it hoped the award would “encourage all those who are striving to achieve peace, reconciliation and justice in Colombia”—others called it a “cowardly maneuver,” and worse.
International journalists took to social media to voice their thoughts:
In a string of tweets, London-based freelancer Ellie Mae O’Hagan argued that the committee had ignored Santos’ crimes and that leftist leaders Timochenko and Cuba’s Raul Castro are more deserving of the award.
As for the ongoing negotiations, the Guardian reported Friday:
For his part, the FARC leader wrote on his Twitter account following the Nobel announcement: “The only prize we aspire to is #PeaceWithSocialJustice for a #Colombia free of paramilitary violence, revenge and lies #PeaceTakeTheStreets.”