Pubdate: Tue, 26 Oct 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: of Telegraph Group Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Jeremy McDermott, Latin America Correspondent COLOMBIAN MARCHERS CALL FOR END TO CIVIL WAR MILLIONS of Colombians took to the streets in the country's largest protest against its 35-year civil war as the latest round of peace talks between the government and the largest rebel group began. Peace rallies were held not only in Colombia, but all over the world, including London. Police said at least two million people marched in the capital, Bogota. "This is unprecedented. The Colombian peace movement is starting to gain the upper hand," said Francisco Santos, news editor of the Bogota daily El Tiempo, who helped plan the marches. Most of the Bogota protesters were dressed in white and wore green ribbons symbolising peace. The capital came to a standstill as the No Mas (No More) movement went on the march. Despite peace negotiations between the government and the largest rebel group, the 15,000-strong Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), that have continued intermittently since January this year, violence in the civil conflict has grown and the number of kidnappings is higher than ever, averaging seven a day. Colombia is also in its deepest recession for over 50 years, with unemployment standing at 20 per cent. All these factors have forced Colombians of all classes and ages to unite against the illegal armies controlling half of the country to demand a ceasefire and an end to kidnapping. As the protesters mobilised, peace negotiations resumed with Farc in Uribe, a farming town in a southern jungle region demilitarised by the government last November as a goodwill gesture to encourage the peace talks. Farc has turned the 16,000- square-mile zone into a virtual Marxist mini-state and has used it to build up the strength of its military machine, importing weapons, exporting drugs and holding up to 600 hostages there out of reach of the security forces. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake