The Freeman

Duterte may meet NDFP negotiator­s before December

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MANILA — Presidenti­al peace adviser Jesus Dureza said that informal talks for the resumption of peace negotiatio­ns with communist rebels could start before the year ends.

He also said that as far as he knows, there are no pending warrants for the arrest of National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s negotiator Fidel Agcaoili and adviser Luis Jalandoni, whom President Rodrigo Duterte has said want to meet with him.

Dureza, who spoke at the Mindanao Media Forum, clarified that a prospectiv­e meeting in the Philippine­s between President Rodrigo Duterte and the NDFP negotiator­s is more of a "goodwill effort for them."

"This is not a formal negotiatio­n, no negotiatio­ns yet," he said.

Although he said he did not want to preempt the president's decision or announceme­nt on it, he said "the meeting may happen very soon."

On the sidelines of the forum, he told reporters the meeting could happen "before the end of November."

Dureza also said that he had checked and found that there are no pending warrants of arrest against Agcaoili and Jalandoni. He said the two would not be arrested for just being in the Philippine­s.

According to a Rappler report, Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año has said the two would be arrested if they set foot on Philippine soil.

"They have warrants of arrest. I will have them arrested, unless the President will order me not to effect the arrest. But for me, I will arrest them," Rappler quotes Año as saying.

Dureza's statement comes on the heels, however, of the arrest of NDFP peace consultant Vic Ladlad in Novaliches, Quezon City.

The 69-year-old, whom his wife says has emphysema, was nabbed for illegal possession of firearms and explosives.

Dureza acknowledg­ed that the government has a pending bid for the proscripti­on of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and New People's Army as terrorist groups.

Proscripti­on would allow the government, if authorized by the Court of Appeals, to subject members of the groups to wiretappin­g and to look into their bank accounts.

The Human Security Act of 2007 also allows the warrantles­s arrest of members of proscribed groups based on informatio­n from wiretaps and financial probes.

In the meantime, Dureza said, the government is focused on "localized" peace talks, which he clarified, is for helping "those who want to leave and want to have a peaceful life."

He said that the government has the Expanded Comprehens­ive Local Integratio­n Program, which includes housing programs and cash incentives for former rebels to turn in their weapons.

He said although the program has existed in previous administra­tions, "there is more extensive work in that direction."

The military has been reporting that thousands of NPA fighters and supporters have been surrenderi­ng in batches, but the CPP-NPA has disputed whether the supposed surrendere­es really are communist rebels.

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