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Farc rebel chief confirms Colombia peace talks

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A video grab taken from the website of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) shows leader Rodrigo Londono who said the group will go to peace talks with the government of President Juan Manuel Santos in Havana 'without rancor or arrogance'. Photo: EPA

The leader of Colombia’s leftist Farc rebels confirmed on Monday that they were ready to take part in peace talks aimed at ending Latin America’s longest-running armed conflict, now nearly 50 years old.

“We come to the table for dialogue without rancour or arrogance,” Farc leader Rodrigo Londono, also known as “Timochenko”, said in a video message carried on the website of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

It was the first comment from Latin America’s oldest guerrilla army since President Juan Manuel Santos announced a week ago that preliminary talks were under way ahead of a formal, full-fledged peace process.

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Timochenko gave no specific details. The video part of his message included footage of young fighters singing a rap song in favour of dialogue with the government.

Santos said full peace talks would start in “several weeks” but warned that “the process will likely be difficult”.

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Colombian press reports said the talks would begin in October, first in Norway and then continuing in Cuba.

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