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Young Colombians Protest Peace Deal Rejection By Setting Up Tent Cities

Young activists have started setting up tent cities in Bogota to demand that the government and rebels figure out a way to save the peace deal.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- After the Colombian peace deal with FARC rebels to end a decades long war was rejected by voters, to save the deal.

The mostly youthful demonstrators at what's called the "Peace Camp" reject any political affiliation. Organizers say their only goal is to make sure the peace deal signed last month by the government and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia isn't scuttled.

University students and supporters of the peace deal signed between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels protest with a sign reading "Stop War" in front of Congress in Bogota, Colombia, October 3, 2016.
University students and supporters of the peace deal signed between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels protest with a sign reading "Stop War" in front of Congress in Bogota, Colombia, October 3, 2016.STR/AFP/Getty Images

The first two tents were raised the night of Oct. 5 after as many as 25,000 people poured into the streets of downtown Bogota to back the rejected accord. Within less than a week, the impromptu encampment has grown to 70 tents surrounded by bunting in the color of the Colombian flag and adorned with white balloons and flowers symbolizing peace.

Hundreds of other Colombians joined the group in Bogota's Plaza Bolivar on Wednesday to sew a giant quilt with the names of 1,900 victims of the conflict. Each of the names - Manuel Getial, Rogelio Ramos, Mariluz Uribe - was written in giant block letters stenciled in ash on individual pieces of white cloth the length of a coffin.

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"This is the act of mourning that hurts the most," said conceptual artist Doris Salcedo, who has been overseeing an army of volunteers working on her "Adding Absences" project. "It's not the mourning of a union leader, a presidential candidate or a journalist. It's the grief of an entire country that has been buried in war."

The peace agreement was negotiated over more than four years in Cuba, a process so admired that President Juan Manuel Santos was awarded this year's Nobel Peace Prize. Backers were confident - and polls agreed - that Colombians would easily approve it in an Oct. 2 referendum six days after the deal was signed in front of world leaders.

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They proved to have been complacent. A narrow majority of voters rejected it, angry that it made too many concessions to a rebel group widely loathed for years of violence, kidnapping and drug trafficking.

A man holds a sign reading "Your NO is not a victory" as he protests after knowing the results of a referendum on whether to ratify a historic peace accord to end a 52-year war between the state and the communist FARC rebels, in Bogota on October 2, 2016.
A man holds a sign reading "Your NO is not a victory" as he protests after knowing the results of a referendum on whether to ratify a historic peace accord to end a 52-year war between the state and the communist FARC rebels, in Bogota on October 2, 2016.LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/Getty Images

Turnout was a mere 37 percent, lower than any congressional election in the past 22 years. Rains from Hurricane Matthew held down voting in some areas along the Caribbean coast where support for the government is strongest. Backers of the deal are still convinced most Colombians favor it.

Each tent at the Peace Camp is hung with a cardboard sign naming rural towns notorious for political violence and places where the "yes" vote overwhelmingly won.

The referendum setback has forced Santos to scramble for some way to save the accord, even if it's not clear what might happen next. The rebels say they don't plan to return to the battlefield but have also rejected any notion they will return to the drawing board.

A sign posted by the tents states that the activists don't take money. But in the corner closest to Bogota's cathedral there are stacks of bottled water, canned food and even a chocolate-frosted cake that well-wishers have donated. Two portable toilets have also been installed with the help of Bogota's pro-government mayor.

RELATED: In U.S., Colombians React to Historic 'No' on Peace Accord

Thousands of pro-peace demonstrators have also taken to the streets Cali, Medellin and other cities - a rare sight in a country where political apathy is the norm.

Santos is holding talks both with the FARC and with conservative opponents led by former President Alvaro Uribe to find agreement on adjustments to the 297-page accord.

It's an uphill battle. FARC leaders have said the referendum results have no legal effect. Uribe insists the voters' will must be respected.

A woman cries after knowing the results of a referendum on whether to ratify a historic peace accord to end a 52-year war between the state and the communist FARC rebels, in Bogota, Colombia, on October 2, 2016.
A woman cries after knowing the results of a referendum on whether to ratify a historic peace accord to end a 52-year war between the state and the communist FARC rebels, in Bogota, Colombia, on October 2, 2016.GUILLERMO LEGARIA/AFP/Getty Images

Uribe, a hardliner whose father was killed by the FARC, is demanding changes the rebels are unlikely to accept. Those include having rebels guilty of war crimes serve up to eight years in rural penal colonies. The current accord spares them jail time if they confess their war crimes. He also wants to eliminate a provision pardoning rebels involved in drug trafficking.

"We're fighting against the ego of a single person who wants to go down in history," complained Jaqueline Sanchez, a 53-year-old social worker, referring to Uribe.

While she blames Uribe for misleading voters and dividing Colombians, she also faults her friends for being so passive and believing in the polls.

"The truth is we were negligent," said Sanchez. "We never thought we were going to lose so we let others decide for us."

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