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Annan names LeMoyne special adviser on Colombia U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has named former journalist and U.N. peace envoyJames LeMoyne as his special adviser on war-torn Colombia, the United Nations announced on Friday. The appointment comes as the United Nations weighs a request from Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, who took office in August, for mediation in Colombia's 38-year war, which pits government forces against left-wing rebels and outlawed right-wing paramilitary groups. LeMoyne, a former New York Times journalist, served previously as a special envoy for the secretary-general in Colombia, on a less formal basis, seeking to facilitate a peace agreement under former President Andres Pastrana. The last attempt to negotiate peace with the country's largest insurgent army, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as FARC, ended in February when Pastrana kicked the guerrillas out of talks after several abuses. Uribe took office in August on pledges to get tough with outlaws fighting in a cocaine-fueled war that claimed the lives of 40,000 people in the last decade and has forced more than two million from from their homes. Uribe, whose father was killed by the FARC about 20 years ago, has invited the United Nations to use its "good offices" to bring the 17,000-strong FARC to the negotiating table. He has said he will only dialogue with rebels once they declare a cease-fire and end their kidnapping-for-ransom business. The 50-year-old president is counting on the United Nations to help the government strike a "humanitarian accord" to free kidnapping victims being held by Marxist rebels. The FARC -- a 1960s rebel force which says it fights for socialist demands -- is holding about 80 high-profile hostages including five congressmen, the former governor of Uribe's home province and former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt. Last month, the FARC asked for the release of all of the some 3,000 guerrillas being held in government prisons -- something the government will most likely reject. LeMoyne, a U.S. citizen born in Germany and raised in Europe, has previously been involved in U.N. peace processes for 20 years in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Haiti, the former Yugoslavia, Northern Ireland, Guatemala and Colombia. The United Nations acted as a facilitator in the three frustrating years which Pastrana devoted to the peace process but did not perform the more demanding role of mediator between the government and rebels. It also played a key role in the resolution of Central American wars. |
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