President Juan Manuel Santos on Thursday extended a bilateral cease-fire with FARC rebels until Dec. 31.
The cease-fire had been set to expire at the end of the month after Colombians rejected a peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in a referendum vote held Oct. 2.
“This is not an ultimatum nor a deadline, but I hope that this is all that the process needs so that a new accord is reached and signed off long beforehand,” Santos told the nation Thursday night during a televised address.
Since the stunning defeat of the deal by just 60,000 votes in which less than 40 percent of eligible voters cast ballots, Santos has been meeting with representatives on both sides of the issue, including youth leaders who have organized massive peace rallies across the country.
“This afternoon I met with some of the student leaders organizing the marches who are demanding the right to live in peace,” he said. “And of course they were right when they said to me, ‘We are neither yes or no, we are society and peace is for society and peace is for all.’”
The cease-fire was due to end Oct. 31 and could have put in danger the peace agreement signed Sept. 26 with the FARC. It is now hoped that with the extension, the “No” campaign led by former President Alvaro Uribe will agree to various issues including, impunity of guerrillas and the extent of the FARC’s political participation.
“No. I will not betray Colombia’s hope,” Santos said in a speech to the International Development Bank in Bogotá on Thursday.