Yahoo – AFP, Alina Dieste, October 7, 2016
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Colombia President Juan Manuel Santos came to power in 2010 (AFP
Photo/Guillermo Legaria)
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Bogota
(AFP) - Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, who won the Nobel Peace Prize
Friday, is a son of a powerful family who staked his legacy on troubled efforts
to make peace with the communist FARC rebels.
The Nobel
Committee hailed the two-term president's "resolute" bid to end Latin
America's longest conflict -- despite a shock referendum defeat last weekend
for the peace accord he has championed.
"I
prefer an imperfect accord that saves lives to a perfect war that keeps sowing
death and pain," Santos had said as he signed the historic deal last month
with his erstwhile mortal enemy, the FARC guerrilla leader Timoleon
"Timochenko" Jimenez.
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Juan Manuel
Santos (AFP Photo/Gustavo IZUS,
Tatiana Magarinos)
|
The
65-year-old Santos, a career politician, led a major offensive against the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) as defense minister from 2006 to
2009.
But after
becoming president in 2010, he changed tack and negotiated for a settlement
with the guerrillas.
"I was
never a hawk or a dove. I've always been a standard-bearer for peace," he
told AFP in an interview before the September deal.
'Do the
right thing'
Santos
defied fierce opposition to the talks from some former allies.
"I am
not looking for applause. I just want to do the right thing," he once
said.
He won
reelection in 2014 in a vote widely seen as a referendum on the talks. But his
popularity rating has since plunged.
Santos said
receiving the Nobel Prize would be "a great stimulus" for efforts to
achieve peace.
"We
are very, very close, we just need to push a bit further," he told the
Nobel Foundation in a telephone interview.
He accepted
the prize "not in my own name, but in the name of all Colombians,
especially the millions of victims," he added later in a televised
address.
"I
will dedicate all my strength to this cause for the rest of my life."
'Political courage'
UN refugee
chief Filippo Grandi hailed Santos's "political courage" and voiced
hope the impasse could be overcome.
A former
hostage of the FARC, Ingrid Betancourt -- a Franco-Colombian former politician
who was held in the jungle for six years -- said it was a "just"
reward for Santos, but added that the rebels should have shared the Nobel.
Since
Santos launched peace negotiations four years ago, his predecessor,
ex-president Alvaro Uribe, has become his main critic, arguing that the peace
accord offered the rebels impunity for their crimes.
Both Uribe
and FARC leader Timochenko congratulated Santos on the award, however.
Santos
"made war as a means to achieve peace," Santos's brother-in-law and
adviser, Mauricio Rodriguez, told AFP recently.
"He
weakened the FARC to make them sit at the negotiating table," he added.
The peace
drive "required courage, audacity, perseverance and a lot of strategy --
those are Santos's strengths."
'Extreme
center' politician
Santos was
born in August 1951 in Bogota into a rich, powerful family entrenched in
Colombian politics and the media.
He has
described himself as politically in the "extreme center."
He was
educated at a top naval academy in the Colombian city of Cartagena and later at
the London School of Economics.
Santos
began his career as a journalist, winning a Spanish award for his coverage of
the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua as a young man.
The work he
did along with his brother Enrique in Nicaragua "had a profound impact on
us both," Santos once said.
In 1991 he
switched to politics, and has served in various ministerial posts.
An admirer
of Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Nelson Mandela, Santos is said
to be an early riser and late sleeper. He survived prostate cancer in 2012.
His source
of strength, he says, is his family -- "my saints," he has called
them, playing on his surname which means saints in Spanish.
He and his
wife Maria Clemencia Rodriguez have three children.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos wins Nobel Peace Prize for "resolute" efforts to end over 5 decades of war https://t.co/9f5Lf5eDGU pic.twitter.com/0XB1ve9yDe— AFP news agency (@AFP) October 7, 2016
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Santos to donate Nobel prize money to Colombia conflict victims - New
THE OLD SOUL 2013 TOOLKIT" – Jan 13, 2013 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Caroll) (Text version)
"... The Change in the Way Things Work
Now I'm going to be very cautious with number five, and I'm going to change a paradigm of the way we channel. For 23 years, we have given you information in the soup of potentials that we read around you as the highest probable potential that exists. These things eventually become your reality because they are your free choice, and we know what you're thinking. We know what the potentials are because we know what the biases are, and we see all of humanity as a whole. Potentials are energy, and it gives us the ability to project your future based on how you are working these potentials. We have done this for a long time. Twenty-three years ago, we told you about many things that were potentially going to happen, and now they are your reality.
But now I'm going to depart from that scenario and I'm going to give you a potential on Earth that is not the strongest. I am going to tell you about a Human Being who has a choice. This potential is only about 50 percent. But I'm going to "read a potential" to you that you didn't expect. It's about a paradigm that is starting to shift.
Let's talk about North Korea. There's a young, new leader there. The potential is that he will never, ever hear this channel, so I can talk freely about him. He is facing a dilemma, for he is young and he knows about the differences in the energy in his land. He feels it. The lineage of his departed father lies upon him and all that is around him expects him to be a clone of this lineage. He is expected to continue the things that he has been taught and make North Korea great.
But he's starting to rethink them. Indeed, he wants to be a great leader, and to be heard and seen, and to make his mark on North Korea's history. His father showed him that this was very important. So he ponders a question: What makes a world leader great?
Let's ask that question to someone in an older earth paradigm from not that long ago. He will be an expert and a successful one. So this is a valid exercise, asking someone from the past who knows. We will ask that question to a man who you know and whose name is Napoleon. For us, this was yesterday and some of you were there.
If you asked Napoleon, "What makes a world leader great?", he will say, "the size of the army, how much area can be efficiently conquered with a given amount of resources and men, how important the leader appears will then be based upon how many citizens call him emperor or king, the taxes he can impose, and how many fear him." Not only was that Napoleon's reality, but he was right for the energy he was part of at the time. So Napoleon went back and forth between world leader, general and prisoner. He accomplished almost everything he set out to do. His expertise was obvious, and you remember his name to this day. He was famous.
What makes a world leader great? What I am showing you is the difference in thinking between then and now. There are some choices that this evolving young Human Being has that could change everything on the planet if he wanted. His father would tell this boy that what makes a world leader great is the potential of his missile power, or how close he can get to having a nuclear weapon, or how he stands up against the power of the West, or how he continues to aggravate and stir drama as a small country - getting noticed and being feared. His father would tell him that this is his lineage and that is what he's been told all his life. His father did it well and surrounded himself with advisors who he then passed on to his son.
Now, there's a 50 percent chance of something happening here, but this is not a strong potential, dear ones. I'm bringing this forward so you can watch it work one way or the other. For if the son continues in his father's footsteps, he is doomed to failure. The energy on the earth will see it as old and he will be seen as a fool. If, however, he figures it out, he could be the most famous man on the planet... which is really what his father wanted.
If Kryon were to advise this man, here's what I would tell him. He could be the greatest known leader the current world has ever known, for what he does now will be something the world will see as a demarcation point from the old ways. Not only that, but what he does now will be in the history books forever, and because of his youth, he has the potential to outlive every other leader on the planet! So he's going to have longer fame than anyone ever has.
I would tell him this: Tell the border guards to go home. Greet the south and begin to unify North and South Korea in a way that no past prophet ever said could happen. Allow the two countries to be separate, but have them as two parts of a larger Korean family with free trade and travel. Start alliances with the West and show them that you mean it. Drop the missile programs because you will never need them!
This will bring abundance to the North Korean people that they never expected! They will have great economic sustenance, schools, hospitals and more respect than ever for their amazing leader. The result would be fame and glory for the son, which the father had never achieved, something that the world would talk about for hundreds of years. It would cause a United Nations to stand and applaud as the son walked into the Grand Assembly. I would ask him, "Wouldn't you like that?"
Doesn't this seem obvious to most of you? He could achieve instant fame and be seen as the one who made the difference and started something amazing. But watch him. He has a choice, but it's not simple. He still has his father's advisors, but one of which he's already dismissed. He may get it, or he may not. There is a 50 percent chance. But I'll tell you that if he doesn't do it, the one after him will. Because it is so obvious.
We show you this to tell you that this is the evolvement of the Human species. It is the slow realization that putting things together is the answer to all things, instead of separating them or conquering them. Those who start promoting compromise and begin to create these energies that never were here before will be the ones you're going to remember. Dear ones, it's going to happen in leadership and politics and in business. It's a new paradigm...."



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