Deep polarization in Colombia leads to runoff in presidential elections

The top two candidates represent opposite sides of the political divide.

It's a runoff to fill the presidency in Colombia, as none of the six candidates running for office Sunday managed to get the 50 percent plus one vote required to be elected.

The deal, along with Colombia's growing refugee and border crisis, was one of the main issues on voters' minds Sunday. It's the legacy of current president Juan Manuel Santos, who was term-limited from running again.

Under Colombian law, if a candidate doesn't get enough votes to win outright, a runoff is called between the two candidates with the most votes. This year, the two still in contention for the June 17 runoff are right-wing candidate Ivan Duque and left-wing candidate Gustavo Petro, who have campaigned on radically disparate platforms and propose very different approaches to the controversial peace deal signed with the FARC.

Duque, an investor-friendly former senator who campaigned against the peace accord, took first place with 39 percent of the vote. Petro, a former guerrilla leader and recent mayor of the capital city Bogota, came in second with 25 percent of the vote.

"We have to focus on the things we agree on, instead of on the things that divide us," he said. "I'm fully open to [enter into] dialogue with any political groups and, above all, with the people."

Historically, many Colombians have been wary of left-leaning politicians who they've seen as friendly to the guerrilla groups with whom they've spent 50 years at war. But disenchantment with years of right-wing rule has led many, particularly young people, to support the left-wing candidate Petro.