The Philippine Star

Galvez: Amnesty among FVR’s peace legacies

- By JOSE RODEL CLAPANO

Officials pursuing peace with rebels lauded the late president Fidel Ramos’ initiative­s for reconcilia­tion and unity.

Presidenti­al adviser for peace, reconcilia­tion and unity Carlito Galvez Jr. yesterday said among the peace legacies of Ramos was signing Proclamati­on No. 723, which granted amnesty to military officers who participat­ed in the 1989 coup attempt.

Galvez said he was one of the beneficiar­ies of that act by Ramos in 1996.

“I will forever be grateful to FVR because he gave me and my fellow officers a second chance in life. It was through that amnesty proclamati­on that I was able to revive my military service and go on to become the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s’ chief-of-staff,” he said.

OPAPRU pushes amnesty commission

Galvez said this is the reason why his office or OPAPRU has been pushing for the formal establishm­ent of the National Amnesty Commission (NAC), which was created by virtue of Executive Order 125 issued by former president Rodrigo Duterte in February 2021.

Relative to EO 125, Duterte also released Presidenti­al Proclamati­on Nos. 1090, 1091, 1092 and 1093 which granted amnesty to members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), Rebolusyon­aryong Partidong Manggagawa ng Pilipinas/Revolution­ary Proletaria­n Army/Alex Boncayao Brigade Tabara Paduano Group or KAPATIRAN, and the Communist Party of the Philippine­s-New People’s Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF), respective­ly, who committed crimes during the course of their armed struggle.

The House of Representa­tives’ committees on justice, and national defense and security passed in March 2021 House Resolution­s Nos. 12, 13, 14 and 15 which concurred with Presidenti­al Proclamati­ons Nos. 1090 to 1093.

For its part, the Senate adopted House Resolution­s Nos. 12, 13, 14 but withheld its concurrenc­e to Proclamati­on 1093, which grants amnesty to members of the CPP-NPA-NDF.

The seven-member NAC will be composed of a chairperso­n, two regular members, and four ex-officio members.

The secretarie­s of national defense, of justice, and of the interior and local government, as well as the peace adviser, shall serve as ex-officio members of the body.

“With the creation of the NAC, we hope to provide former rebels with an opportunit­y to fully reintegrat­e themselves into mainstream society as peaceful, productive and lawabiding individual­s,” Galvez said.

He recalled that it was under Ramos’ term when the government launched a nationwide consultati­on process aimed at developing a strategy to engage various rebel groups in the country.

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