The Borneo Post

Manila formally axes latest peace round with communists

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NOORDWIJK AAN ZEE, Netherland­s: The Philippine government on Sunday formally called off the latest round of peace talks with communist insurgents, after the parties failed to resolve a dispute over a rebel order for fighters to step up attacks.

“We are maintainin­g the decision made not to participat­e in the fifth round of talks,” chief government negotiator Jesus Dureza told journalist­s after almost 10 hours of closed- door consultati­ons.

“There are no compelling reasons for us to change the decision ... which we announced yesterday,” he said, adding that Manila was ‘ formally’ withdrawin­g from the round.

It was the fifth scheduled round of talks since the resumption of formal negotiatio­ns between Manila and the communists in August.

They were meant to address such issues as a joint interim ceasefire, social and economic reforms and human rights issues.

The breakdown of the talks, held in a scenic Dutch seaside resort, came as fighting flared Sunday between Philippine government forces and Islamist militants in the south, with the death toll nearing 100 after almost a week of fighting.

Talks stalled Saturday when Dureza objected to the communists’ telling guerrillas to intensify attacks in response to President Rodrigo Duterte’s declaratio­n of martial law in parts of the country.

Dureza said Sunday that the talks would not resume until there were indication­s of an ‘environmen­t conducive to achieving just and sustainabl­e peace’.

Asked whether this included the communists’ order to escalate attacks, Dureza said: “It is a factor.”

But Dureza, who is also Duterte’s chief advisor, emphasised that the withdrawal from this round of talks was not a formal withdrawal from the peace process initiated in August 2016.

Duterte declared martial law on Tuesday across the southern third of the Philippine­s to quell what he called a fast-growing threat from terrorists linked to the Islamic State group.

Communists insurgents, who are active in wide areas of the archipelag­o, including the south, responded to Duterte’s declaratio­n by ordering their own forces to ‘carry out more tactical offensives’. Chief rebel negotiator Fidel Agcaoili said the communist negotiator­s had ‘recommende­d to our leadership to reconsider the order, but that takes time’.

He said the NDFP, a coalition of several groups of which the Communist Party of the Philippine­s ( CPP) is among the most prominent, ‘deeply regretted’ Manila’s decision to shelve the talks. — AFP

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