Kaci Kullmann Five, chairwoman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, gives a press conference to announce the laureate of the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize at the Nobel Institute in Oslo.

The commander of Colombia’s Marxist rebels says he only wanted the prize of peace after the guardians of the Nobel Peace Prize left him out of the 2016 award to President Juan Manuel Santos.
FARC rebel leader Rodrigo Londono, better known by his nom de guerre Timochenko, signed a peace deal with Santos last month seeking to end their 52-year conflict. Voters narrowly rejected the award in a referendum on Sunday.
“The only prize to which we aspire is that of peace with social justice for a Colombia without paramilitarism, without retaliation nor lies,” he wrote on his personal Twitter account after the award went only to Santos. 
The UN hailed Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, for his “political courage” and voiced hope the award would boost his country’s troubled peace process.
The UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein, “would obviously hope that this gives a big boost to the peace process which has been going through a bit of a rollercoaster in the past two weeks,” his spokesman Rupert Colville told reporters in Geneva.
Friday’s announcement came as a surprise after Colombian voters rejected the terms of a historic deal Santos reached last month with FARC rebel chief Rodrigo Londono, alias Timoleon “Timochenko” Jimenez, after nearly four years of talks.
Handing the award to Santos despite the shock referendum vote “is clearly recognition by the Nobel Committee of just how important the peace process in Colombia is,” Colville said.
The Colombia conflict has killed more than 260,000 people and left 45,000 missing over five decades, drawing in several leftist guerrilla groups, right-wing paramilitaries and drug gangs.
It has also forced some seven million people to flee their homes, displacing them either inside the country or prompting them to become refugees.
UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi said he was celebrating the prize to Santos “in a selfish way,” pointing out that Colombia has “the largest internal displacement situation in the world.”
“It’s only through the peace process that it can be addressed and resolved,” he said, voicing conviction that “the present complicated political impasse will be overcome, and President Santos, his government and his co-actors in the peace agreement will stay the course and bring it forward.”
“So again my heartfelt congratulations for a Peace Prize that recognized essentially political courage,” he said.

Source: Arab News