Peace Talks with ELN at Risk After Multiple Attacks on Oil Pipeline in Colombia
Multiple attacks were carried out in the early hours of the morning that injured two members of the Colombian military, ruptured one of the nationโs largest oil pipelines, and threatened peace talks between the government and the country’s largest insurgent group, according to public officials and state-controlled oil company Ecopetrol.
Two military members were injured in an apparent grenade attack on the Caรฑo Limรณn-Coveรฑas pipeline that sent both to the hospital, where they were expected to recover fully. Some oil spilled, according to Ecopetrol, but the product was “contained in the crater left by the explosion,โ said the Bogotรก-based company in a statement.
The act is suspected to have been launched by the โJosรฉ Daniel Suรกrezโ faction of the National Liberation Army (ELN), which is now the countryโs largest armed guerrilla group and has been formally negotiating a peace deal with the government since early last year in Quito.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos responded byย formally recalling the country’s peace negotiator to Bogotรก from Ecuador. The negotiator, Gustavo Bell, was set to re-engage in discussions to extend a three-month ceasefire that had expired just hours before the attacks.
“We were always willing to extend the ceasefire with ELN,” said Santos on Twitter, adding that “they inexplicably refused and today reinitiated terrorist attacks.” The president said that he told Gustavo Bell, the government’s chief negotiator, to return to Colombia and “evaluate the future of the peace process.”
Santos said on Twitter that he also instructed the military toย “act with force and respond to this ELN aggression.”
“My commitment to peace will be unwavering,” added Santos, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2016, “but this comes through concrete action, not only words.”
Negotiations between the two sides officially began in February 2017, not long after the government finalized a peace agreement with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), and had yielded some progress in the form of a 102-day bilateral ceasefire that was signed in the lead up to a national visit by Pope Francis and formally began on October 1.
According to Ecopetrol, another attack, near the Boyacรก town of Cubarรก, hit a different section of the Caรฑo Limรณn-Coveรฑas pipeline this morning, leading the oil company to initiate its official contingency plan to deal with the disruption and potential environmental fallout. โPumping was immediately suspendedโ at eight wells, stated the company, and local communities were warned that preventive measures should be taken due to the potential risk of a an oil spill.
Yet another attack was suspected by Ecopetrol in the municipality of Aguazul in Casanare after the company detected a loss of pressure in the pipeline. It also suspended pumping and alerted the nearby communities. Ecopetrol stated this morning that it was then awaiting assistance from public security personnel to assess the situation before initiating its plan to โcarry out the required repair and environmental recovery activities.โ
Pipeline attacks on Caรฑo Limรณn-Coveรฑas had remained an ongoing concern in the first half of 2017, typically attributed to ELN, but there have been fewer reported since the ceasefire began last September.
Photo: According to Ecopetrol, the attack in Boyacรก left a large crater. (Credit: Ecopetrol)

























