Colombian peace agreement The peace accord between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) aims to end a 52-year-old guerrilla war that has cost 220,000 lives and displaced more than 5 million people President Juan Manuel Santos FARC leader Timoleón Jiménez DISARMAMENT FARC must begin to move its estimated 7,000 fighters into 22 “relocation zones” and six existing rebel camps where they will turn in weapons within 180 days of signing peace agreement UN monitors will receive all group’s weapons. No civilians allowed to enter FARC camps, to guarantee rebel security JUSTICE FOR VICTIMS Amnesty granted to FARC members whose only formal criminal charge is “rebellion” Rebels who confess to serious crimes will be sentenced to up to eight years of “restriction of liberty” under special conditions Denying involvement in war crimes, and being proved guilty, would lead to prison sentences of up to 20 years Cartagena: Peace accord to be signed on Sep 26 Guajira Córdoba Chocó Antioquia Tolima Cauca Nariño Putumayo ECUADOR Camps Relocation zones Cesar VENEZUELA Norte de Santander Arauca Bogotá Meta COLOMBIA Guaviare Caquetá BRAZIL PERU 200km 125 miles POLITICAL REPRESENTATION Rebels will temporarily be allocated 10 seats in 268-member Congress for two legislative periods lasting until 2026 COST OF PEACE Vocational training for former rebels, agrarian reform, road construction and other programmes included in deal would cost between $40 billion and $75bn over next decade RATIFYING ACCORD Colombians will decide to approve or reject peace accord in nationwide plebiscite on October 2 Source: Mesa de Conversaciones Pictures: Getty Images