The Manila Times

Govt officially cancels peace talks

- ENDS CATHERINE S. VALENTE AND BERNADETTE E. TAMAYO

“Recent tragic and violent incidents all over the country committed by the communist rebels left the President with no other choice but to arrive at this decision. We take guidance from the President’s recent announceme­nts and declaratio­ns,” he added.

CPP is the Communist Party of the Philippine­s, which controls the NPA and the NDF or the National Democratic Front, which had negotiated with the government.

Duterte, a former student of CPP founding chairman Jose Maria Sison, decade-long Maoist insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives.

But in his visit to soldiers Tuesday, Duterte announced the end of talks with the NPA following their string of attacks that have affected civilians.

The President also threatened to shut down mining firms that give revolution­ary taxes to the rebels, seen as a form of extortion by the military, spared from the rebels’ attacks.

On Wednesday, the President said in remarks before the military in Nueva Ecija that he would order the arrest of all rebels, including their “legal fronts helping to topple the government and sow terror.”

“I will no longer recognize them as an entity negotiatin­g with the government. I will simply declare you all terrorists.

(You’re terrorists and even your legal fronts are terrorists, I know. Let’s not fool each other, I’ve been there),” the President said.

“You are helping each other, conspiring to topple or whatever to sow terror. We will treat you as a criminal. Period. And we will arrest everybody connected, (even their) legal fronts,” he added.

Militant lawmakers lamented the President’s decision.

Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Carlos Zarate said the cancellati­on of the government’s peace talks would not resolve the root causes of the armed rebellion.

“That is precisely why peace talks must proceed because the two sides are policy being pushed by the militarist elements in the Cabinet or a localized talks practicall­y negates the inher- ent purpose of a peace negotiatio­n,” Zarate said.

Zarate also said peace could be attained with the rebels if the government dealt with the peace talks at the national level, and implemente­d “genuine” agrarian reform and national industrial­ization.

Kabataan Party-list Rep. Sarah Elago claimed in a statement the cancellati­on of the peace talks would only further the United States and the Duterte administra­tion’s “all-out war approach.”

No reciprocit­y

Dureza said Duterte had taken “unpreceden­ted steps” in trying to bring peace, but “the Communist Party and its armed elements have not shown reciprocit­y.”

Duterte already halted talks with the rebels in July following a series of NPA attacks against government forces. He said he would not resume the talks unless the rebels stopped their extortion activities.

by Norway was suspended on May 27 after the government panel withdrew from the negotiatin­g table in response to the communist group’s order to guerrillas to intensify attacks against security forces amid the imposition of martial law in Mindanao.

In an interview with the government-run PTV network in September, the President said the resumption of the talks would just be a waste of money.

A number of senators supported the decision of President Duterte to cancel peace talks with the communist rebels. Senators Ralph Recto, Francis Escudero and Paolo Benigno Aquino 4th said the CPP-NPA-NDF must honor a they were hopeful the peace process could be saved with backchanne­l talks.

“If I had my way, be a little more patient and do backchanne­l talks. But I respect the call of the President. I am not the President,” said Recto.

Aquino reiterated that all peace talks must be done in good faith. “We trust the military, of course, to make the necessary readings on the matter. We want peace. But in any type of peace talks, both parties need to be of good faith,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? This undated handout photo released by the Philippine National Police on November 22 shows Fernando Sayasaya, 53, in Calamba, Laguna. The ex-priest wanted in the United States for allegedly sexually abusing minors in North Dakota in the late 1990s...
AFP This undated handout photo released by the Philippine National Police on November 22 shows Fernando Sayasaya, 53, in Calamba, Laguna. The ex-priest wanted in the United States for allegedly sexually abusing minors in North Dakota in the late 1990s...

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