The Philippine Star

Oslo, Hanoi eyed as venue for Rody-Joma meet

- By JOSE RODEL CLAPANO

Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) founding chairman Jose Ma. Sison wants Oslo, Norway or Hanoi, Vietnam as venue for his meeting with President Duterte.

According to Sison, the government peace panel and the National Democratic Front (NDF) have initially agreed during backchanne­l talks to have Duterte attend the Oslo ceremony for the signing of the interim peace agreement.

However, Sison said the government backed out and offered Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea to attend the signing in Oslo instead, as reported by ABS-CBN.

Sison said the NDF proposed the capital of Vietnam as a venue in considerat­ion of Duterte’s health.

He said the government rejected Hanoi and the special envoy of Norway, which served as third party facilitato­r, cannot make any arrangemen­t there as well.

“For my soonest possible interface with Duterte, the NDF has considered my meeting at the signing of the interim peace agreement,” ABS-CBN quoted Sison as saying.

Sison noted Duterte had insisted to come home to meet him.

Sison reiterated he will only return to the country if there will be substantia­l progress in the peace talks.

Vital parts of the interim peace accord are a ceasefire deal, amnesty proclamati­on for political prisoners and an agreement on agrarian reform and rural developmen­t and national industrial­ization and economic developmen­t, key components of the proposed Comprehens­ive Agreement on Social and Economic Reforms.

Sison said his premature return to the Philippine­s would be contradict­ory to previous agreement to hold talks in a foreign neutral venue.

He said this would also place him and the entire peace negotiatio­n at Duterte’s mercy.

Meanwhile, the CPP urged the people to unite and oppose the national ID system.

The CPP said the ID system has long been proposed by security officials as this would facilitate mass surveillan­ce by looking into the personal informatio­n of the bearer.

“Past regimes have failed to push the national ID system confronted with popular opposition,” the CPP said.

They said President Duterte will have greater powers and can institute more “insidious measures” with a national ID in place.

The CPP said the national ID system will practicall­y be reviving the detested cedula of the Spanish empire, which was used to control the movement of people and suppress their democratic rights.

“In the hands of Duterte, the national ID system is bound to be a weapon of suppressio­n, a weapon of mass monitoring and surveillan­ce to track everyone’s movement, and to bribe and arm-twist, especially against Duterte’s political critics and dissenters,” the CPP said.

The CPP said Duterte’s feverish push to implement a national ID is part of his machinatio­ns to establish a totalitari­an state of mass surveillan­ce, population control, social, political and criminal profiling and mass murder.

“The draft law of the national ID system has been bulldozed by Duterte’s supermajor­ity of political allies in the House of Representa­tives. Will the Senate pass the proposed ID system with similar dispatch and prove itself to be no more than a rubberstam­p than the Lower House is?” the CPP said.

The CPP said many countries have used the system to collect, officially as well as illegally, informatio­n for “terrorist profiling” of suspected individual­s.

“To conceal its insidious aims and dupe the people to support the proposed identifica­tion system, the Duterte regime makes false claims that the national ID will serve to expedite the delivery of government service. Such claims are put to dispute by the fact that the Duterte regime continues to cut the budget for public education and public health and other important social services,” the CPP said.

“How can a national ID system help facilitate the provision of public health when government hospitals are, in fact, being commercial­ized and privatized in whole and in part? If the priority of government is to provide everyone with free public health, free education, free public housing, public transporta­tion and so on, there is no need for a national ID system for the people to benefit from these,” it said.

The CPP said a national system of identifica­tion has nothing to do with the efficiency in the provision of public service.

Neither does computeriz­ation make a clean government, they said.

“This is starkly demonstrat­ed by continuing widespread corruption in government agencies which has computeriz­ed its record-keeping and processing. Manipulati­on of election results in the Philippine­s has become more widespread, albeit less obvious, through automation,” the CPP said.

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