The Philippine Star

Duterte: Peace talks with Reds may resume in July

- CHRISTINA MENDEZ By – With Jaime Laude, Rhodina Villanueva, Jose Rodel Clapano

After giving a two-month ultimatum to return to the negotiatin­g table, President Duterte revealed Thursday that formal peace negotiatio­ns between the government and the communist rebels may resume in July.

Duterte told the gathering of new-elected barangay chairmen in Lapu-Lapu City of positive developmen­ts in the peace talks with the communists.

He said he called on exiled Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) founding chairman Jose Ma. Sison to come to start the peace talks.

“I will be talking to the rebels. I’m talking to Sison. We will start the talks maybe July,” he said.

Duterte in November cancelled the peace talks with communist rebels, accusing them of bad faith in deadly attacks against soldiers and police while peace negotiatio­ns are ongoing.

Duterte had already shelved a round of negotiatio­ns in May and informal talks in July last year, citing deadly guerrilla attacks on security forces.

Duterte appealed to the communist rebels to lay down their arms as a sign of good faith for the renewed peace negotiatio­ns.

“If there will be no decommissi­oning of firearms, nothing will happen,” he said.

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

Sison pressed for 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, as vital parts of the interim peace agreement.

Sison said the peace negotiatio­ns have become even more pressing due to the economic crisis, imperial exploitati­on and plunder of the country.

Government peace panel chairman Silvestre Bello III said the peace panel will seek an interim peace agreement with the National Democratic Front (NDF) before the formal restart of the peace talks.

The NDF is the umbrella organizati­on representi­ng the CPP and its guerrilla front, New People’s Army (NPA), in the peace talks with the government.

Bello said the interim peace agreement will be coupled with a coordinate­d unilateral ceasefire.

From there, Bello said they will be talking about possible proclamati­on of amnesty for the rebels but subject to concurrenc­e of Congress.

The militant Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan), however, decried the continued harassment by the military on communitie­s suspected of harboring the NPA.

Bayan secretary-general Renato Reyes said the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) should refrain from militarizi­ng communitie­s once peace talks resume.

“The bigger concern right now – a major hindrance to peace – is the intensifyi­ng AFP operations against civilians,” Reyes said.

“Communitie­s continue to be militarize­d. Civilians are being rounded up and forced to ‘surrender’ as NPA combatants. Activists are being arrested and slapped with trumped-up charges,” he said.

The group said the AFP and Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana should explain if the arrests of civilians that included farmers and activists would cease one peace talks resume.

“The way we see it, the biggest threats to the resumption of the peace talks come from the ranks of the military, from the likes of Lorenzana,” he said.

Reyes said Bayan supports the resumption of the peace talks to address the roots of the armed conflict.

“This goes beyond just ceasefire agreements. Socioecono­mic reforms are urgently needed to address poverty, which is the reason why rebellion exists in the country,” Reyes said.

This developed as the military raided a suspected food supply chain of the NPA in Bukidnon on Wednesday.

On the other hand, the military killed a suspected NPA rebel during an encounter in Apayao province yesterday.

The military said this showed the communist leadership has heightened their recruitmen­t of new members in a bid to reestablis­h their presence in key areas in Northern Luzon, Southern Tagalog and the Visayas.

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