The Philippine Star

Reds reject local peace talks

- By ARTEMIO DUMLAO – With Jose Rodel Clapano, Roel Pareño

BAGUIO CITY – Communist rebels yesterday said they would not hold localized peace talks with the government, dismissing them as “pretend talks.”

“Localized peace talks are a sham, waste of people’s money and doomed to fail... a worn-out psywar tactic to project victory to conceal the continuing failure of the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippine­s) to suppress people’s resistance and stem the steady growth of the NPA (New People’s Army),” the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) said in a statement.

“This pretend localized peace talks will not involve even a single genuine revolution­ary force,“the CPP said. “Duterte will certainly be negotiatin­g only with his own shadow.”

Malacañang on Thursday said it is preparing an executive order that would pursue localized peace talks in lieu of formal negotiatio­ns with the National Democratic Front.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said an agreement was reached during a recent meeting of the Cabinet cluster on security, justice and peace.

Roque said a proposed seven-point guiding framework would assist local officials in conducting peace initiative­s in their respective areas.

However, the CPP said only local government officials and military officers are happy with localized peace talks.

“It is a money-making racket with hundreds of millions of funds that will surely end up in their pockets,” the group said.

The CPP cited the BalikBaril and Comprehens­ive Local Integratio­n Program for rebel-returnees, saying these are “corruption-riddled programs.”

“With funds coming directly from Malacañang, military field officers have been overzealou­s in their effort to conjure the illusion of mass surrendere­es... Hundreds of local residents are being rounded up... then misreprese­nted before the public as surrendere­es,” the CPP said.

As this developed, 13 NPA rebels surrendere­d to the 53rd Infantry Battalion in Guipos, Zamboanga del Sur on Thursday.

The surrendere­es cited the betrayal of the promises of NPA leaders and the government’s intensifie­d campaign against communist rebels for their decision to lay down their arms, Lt. Col. Marlowe Patria said.

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