The Philippine Star

Give free rein to ‘passion for peace’

- SATUR C. OCAMPO

The momentaril­y disrupted work on the GRP-NDFP peace talks has continued. In eight days the 4th round of formal negotiatio­ns will take place in Norway (April 2-6). This time the talks will not be in Oslo but in a town called Noordwijk.

The change in the venue seems aimed at providing a fresh atmosphere for non-adversaria­l negotiatio­ns to proceed on the primordial agenda of social and economic reforms and on the sensitive matter of forging a viable interim bilateral ceasefire agreement for the duration of the peace talks.

Recall that in early February the volatile President blustering­ly cancelled the GRP-NDFP peace talks he had revived in August and let loose his war-making impulse. Taking the cue, his defense secretary declared an “all-out war” against the CPP-NPA. Then early this month, while having signalled he would pursue the peace talks, Mr. Duterte “meantime” reinforced the aggressive campaign with express permission to the AFP and PNP to use all their “assets” in waging it.

That has set off more aerial bombings of communitie­s in the hinterland­s across the country, using warplanes and helicopter gunships, aside from artillery bombardmen­ts from AFP field units on the ground. Such combined bombings – supposedly launched under the rubric of “focused operations” with “surgical” accuracy – have had little, if any, effect against NPA combatants, according to reports. Instead, as documented by human rights groups, the aerial assaults have caused increasing numbers of civilians to flee back again to evacuation centers. Many rural homes get flattened or burned. The farmers’ crops are damaged, and other sources of livelihood are seriously disrupted.

In brief, aerial bombings are causing much “collateral damage” (a term coined by so-called US counterins­urgency experts). Having anticipate­d these, President Duterte even offered apologies in advance to the civilians who would be adversely affected by his orders to his soldiers to go ahead and “flatten the hills.”

But would that advance apology suffice to make up for the damages inflicted upon his impoverish­ed constituen­cies whose lives he had vowed to uplift? Moreover, Mr. Duterte would also have realized by now that flying aircraft and dropping bombs and rockets entails more financial costs for the government and the people than whatever gains are expected in this all-out war. Hadn’t he said that rather than buy bullets he would prefer to buy machinerie­s and give them away to help the poor?

This mode of war will continue until otherwise ordered by the AFP chief of staff, Gen. Eduardo Ano, says the armed forces spokesman. Or until the two sides shall have reinstated their respective unilateral ceasefire declaratio­ns before the formal negotiatio­ns begin on April 2. (The earlier ceasefires had been in effect between August 2016 and February 2017.) The reinstatem­ent was agreed upon in a joint statement issued in Utrecht, the Netherland­s last March 11, after successful back-channel talks initiated by Mr. Duterte.

Within the next eight days, other steps agreed upon are expected to be taken, mainly by the government, such as the following: 1) releasing an NDFP consultant arrested in Davao City in February to join the 4th round of negotiatio­ns; 2) ensuring the continued participat­ion in the talks of 19 NDFP consultant­s and staff released in August (but ordered rearrested in February) by taking all legal means to enable their “free and unhindered movement;” 3) releasing three NDFP consultant­s convicted of common crimes through presidenti­al pardon also to enable them to join the Norway talks; and 4) exerting best efforts to effect the release, on or before April 2, of 19 aged, sickly and long-detained political prisoners on humanitari­an grounds.

All these commitment­s by the GRP panel comply with the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees and the Comprehens­ive Agreement on Human Rights and Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law – both reaffirmed by the two parties a second time on March 11 along with all previously signed agreements and joint statements.

Giving impetus to the continuati­on of the peace negotiatio­ns are the exhaustive efforts and sustained financing by the Royal Norwegian Government, which has acted as third-party facilitato­r since

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