The Phnom Penh Post

Duterte declares communist ceasefire

-

PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte announced yesterday a unilateral ceasefire with communist rebels who are waging one of Asia’s longest insurgenci­es, and urged them to reciprocat­e.

Duterte made the announceme­nt in his first State of the Nation Address to Congress as he laid the groundwork for peace talks with the communists that are due to begin in Norway next month.

“To stop violence on the ground [and] restore peace, I am now announcing a unilateral ceasefire,” Duterte told lawmakers, as he called on the rebels to do the same.

The communist rebellion has killed about 30,000 people since the 1960s.

The communists’ armed wing, the New People’s Army, is believed to have fewer than 4,000 gunmen today, down from a peak of 26,000 in the 1980s, according to the military.

But it retains support among the deeply poor in rural areas, and its troops regularly kill security forces while extorting money from local businesses.

Dutere’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino, revived negotiatio­ns soon after taking office in 2010 but shelved them in 2013, accusing the rebels of being insincere about finding a political settlement.

The discussion­s col lapsed a f ter his government rejected the rebels’ demand to release scores of their jailed comrades, whom they described as “political prisoners”.

Duterte, who took office on June 30 and counts exiled communist rebel leader Jose Maria Sison as a friend, had previously offered to release some political prisoners.

His aides have already held preliminar­y talks with Sison and other senior communist leaders, during which they agreed to resume the peace negotiatio­ns next month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia