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Colombia's FARC to give up kidnapping

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia has announced it is freeing the last of the government captives it has held for years, and will abandon the practice of kidnapping

Government says group has 12 captives

Colombia's main rebel group, commonly known astheFARC, announced it is freeing the last of the government captives it has held for years, and will abandon the practice of kidnapping.

The leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia said on its website that it will free 10 "prisoners of war" and says they are the last in their control.

The government says the rebel group holds at least 12.

A liberation could help advance toward negotiations to end the long civil conflict since the government says the group known as the FARC must free all the hostages it holds before talks can start. However the FARC did not say it was abandoning hostilities.

The rebels announced on Dec. 27 that they would free six of the captives, but said a month later that they were delaying the release because of a government "militarization" of the area where it said release was planned. It did not specify the location or set a date.

That announcement, also on the rebel website, prompted President Juan Manuel Santos to issue a tweet: "My God, no more tricks and deception. We don't even know where the hostages are. They haven't provided the coordinates. Free them now!"

Latin America's last major rebel movement, the FARC was founded in 1964. It has been releasing captives piecemeal since early 2008. The new statement assured that the group will give up the practice of kidnapping.

The FARC has waged a 47-year revolutionary war against the Colombian government and numbers about 8,000 militants, according to the country's Defence Ministry. The group has been hit hard in recent years by Colombia's U.S.-backed military.