The Star Malaysia

New terms for Filipino rebels

Manila wants insurgents encamped in assigned areas for talks

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MANILA: The Philippine government will demand that peace talks with communist rebels shift from Europe to the Philippine­s and the insurgents are encamped in designated areas during the negotiatio­ns to peacefully settle one of Asia’s longest-raging insurgenci­es.

Presidenti­al adviser Jesus Dureza said yesterday that New People’s Army guerrillas would also be asked to stop collecting so-called “revolution­ary tax” from companies and demanding to be part of a future coalition government.

President Rodrigo Duterte’s conditions were finalised in a meeting with top officials late Wednesday.

They’re seen as likely to be rejected by the guerrillas, who fear that holding talks in Manila would expose them – including their Europe-exiled leaders – to military surveillan­ce and harassment.

The low-level, rural-based rebellion, which has raged since 1969, has left about 40,000 combatants and civilians dead, hampered security and economic developmen­t in the impoverish­ed countrysid­e for nearly half a century.

The military estimates that about 3,900 Marxist insurgents continue to wage the insurgency.

“The doors for the resumption of peace talks ... are still open,” Dureza said in a statement.

Dureza said the president still wishes Norway to continue brokering the broader talks, but added that “in the meantime, localised peace arrangemen­ts may be pursued by the local government units with the insurgents”.

When he took power in 2016, Duterte resumed peace talks with the rebels but cancelled them last year to protest continued guerrilla attacks on troops.

He also signed an order declaring the rebel group a terrorist organisati­on, which the insurgents oppose.

The United States has also designated the rebels as terrorists. After preliminar­y talks, both sides agreed to a new temporary cease-fire on June 21, with peace talks to resume a few days later in Norway, which has been brokering the decades-long negotiatio­ns.

But Duterte delayed the talks indefinite­ly to allow public consultati­ons, antagonisi­ng the guerrillas.

Last week, communist rebel leader Jose Maria Sison, who founded the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and is based in the Netherland­s, said the insurgents can no longer hold peace talks with Duterte’s administra­tion and that it is better to help oust him and negotiate with his successor.

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