Colombia gears up for tight presidential vote

Juan Manuel Santos frames vote as a choice between war and peace for one of the world's longest-running conflicts.

Supporters of Oscar Ivan Zuluaga, candidate for the Democratic Center.
Supporters of Oscar Ivan Zuluaga, candidate for the Democratic Center.

Colombians will vote on Sunday in what is being described as the tightest presidential election in two decades.
President Juan Manuel Santos, who has cast the election as a choice between peace and war, faces right-wing challenger Oscar Ivan Zuluaga, a skeptic of talks, in the second round of this year's elections.
The candidates are locked in an unpredictable race, that polls show is too close to call and may have the narrowest margin for 20 years.  
Zuluaga won 29.3 percent of the first round vote , while Santos got 25.7 percent. Three other candidates were eliminated following the first round.   
Santos, 62, began talks with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) to end a conflict that has killed over 200,000 people and displaced millions of others. 
He has made the pursuit of peace the centerpiece of his campaign.  
He announced this week that preliminary talks had begun with the nation's second biggest insurgent group, the National Liberation Army. 
Zuluaga, 55, who accuses Santos of negotiating with 'terrorists', will impose new conditions on FARC like prison terms for serious crimes and a ban on political participation, should he win. 
His vow to suspend peace talks after taking office helped win over hard-line opponents of the negotiations, but he softened that stance after his first-round victory in an apparent effort to attract moderate voters. 
The election is unlikely to have much market impact because Santos and Zuluaga, both former finance ministers, hold similar pro-business views.  
Each wants to encourage foreign investment and improve mining infrastructure. 
The rebels have said they will not go to jail and refuse to down their weapons until peace is signed. Santos' backers fear the talks, which have reached partial agreements on three of five points, will collapse if Zuluaga wins. 
Other Colombians, weary of previous failed attempts to reach peace, say a return to the hard-line policies espoused by Zuluaga and his mentor, ex-president Alvaro Uribe, is the only way to defeat the FARC and get justice for victims. 
Uribe, who remains popular with voters and is considered a political king-maker, once backed Santos, who served as his defense minister, but the two fell out over the negotiations.  
The former president has said the talks are a betrayal of Colombians and that a deal could allow rebel leaders, many of whom are wanted for war crimes or drug trafficking, to escape prosecution and be offered seats in congress.