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Colombia is moving towards peace, but in the coca fields whose narcotic produce have fuelled decades of conflict, villagers fear they are being abandoned to a new kind of war. A historic deal signed by the government and FARC rebels aims to demobilize the leftist force and replace the drug crop that has funded it with something safer.
But in Narino, a jungle-covered region on Colombia's southwestern coast, people that live off the sparkling fields of green coca plants say the deal takes away their livelihood and leaves them at the mercy of a new gang turf conflict.
Locals used to pay the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) for protection from other forces in the conflict, and from authorities looking to stamp out coca.
Over the past half-century of conflict, the Narino region has suffered violence involving rebels, drug gangs, illegal miners and human traffickers.
"There was a war between various groups for control of the area," said Jesus Ramos, a 42-year-old coca grower in the village of Policarpa.
"As soon as the FARC gives up and this village is left alone, the same thing that happened in past years will happen again."
For the authorities, the FARC were a murderous rebel force. But for locals here, they were protectors.
With the FARC around, "there was respect. They punished anyone who was disorderly," says shopkeeper Roberto Delgado, 42.
"We are afraid that when the FARC leave, there will be no more security."
Colombia ranks as the world's biggest coca and cocaine producer, according to the United Nations.
Coca leaves produce the paste that forms the base ingredient for the drug.
Under the peace deal, the FARC has agreed to abandon the coca trade and disband, transforming into a political party.
The state has pledged to help plant alternative crops.
"It is a cause for hope in this process that they have committed to honoring their historic debt to overcome the poverty that so affects this area," local FARC commander Ramiro, 44, told AFP.
"Now we must seek alternative ways of making a living." But locals do not trust that will happen without the FARC to stick up for them.
"When the FARC aren't there, people will come and tear out the crops and there will be no work for us," says Delgado.
"If the coca goes, there will be nothing. People live off it." Locals do not believe that they can earn the same living from planting other crops in this isolated, impoverished region.

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