The inequality rewrites as
$\displaystyle \sum \dfrac{(a-b)^2}{2ab} \geq 2-\dfrac{\displaystyle 2\sum ab}{3}+\prod |a-b|,$
with all sums and products being cyclic. Note that
$2-\dfrac{\displaystyle 2 \sum ab}{3}=\dfrac{\displaystyle 2(3-\sum ab)}{3}=\dfrac{\displaystyle 2(\sum a^2-\sum ab)}{3}=\dfrac{\displaystyle \sum (a-b)^2}{3},$
hence we are left to prove that
$\displaystyle \sum (a-b)^2(\dfrac{1}{2ab}-\dfrac{1}{3}) \geq \prod |a-b|$
However,
$\dfrac{1}{2ab}-\dfrac{1}{3}=\dfrac{3-2ab}{6ab}=\dfrac{(a-b)^2+c^2}{6ab} \geq \dfrac{c|a-b|}{3ab},$
hence the desired inequality boils down to
$\sum \dfrac{c|a-b|^3}{3ab} \geq \prod |a-b|,$
which readily follows due to the AM-GM inequality.