Arab News

Philippine­s, communist rebels agree to resume talks, truce

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MANILA: The Philippine government and communist rebels have agreed to resume peace talks and restore separate ceasefires after an escalation of deadly clashes, officials said Sunday.

Government and rebel negotiator­s will resume talks early next month and discuss the terms of a broader cease- fire, presidenti­al adviser Jesus Dureza said. Norway, which has been brokering the negotiatio­ns, hosted two days of informal talks in the Netherland­s that led to a decision to resume the negotiatio­ns on ending one of Asia’s longestrun­ning rebellions.

Just three days ago, President Rodrigo Duterte threatened to unleash an all- out war against the New People’s Army guerrillas after they killed four policemen and wounded another in an ambush in southern Davao del Sur province.

“I am ready for all- out war, another 50 years,” Duterte said Thursday at the policemen’s wake. “I can assure you that the armed forces and the Philippine National Police would respond. This time I am using everything — rockets and bombs.”

Duterte did not mention the talks’ resumption in his speech at the annual graduation of cadets at the Philippine Military Academy Sunday in northern Baguio city, where he instead condoled with the families of government troops who died in combat. He promised better and more weapons for soldiers and thanked “those who risked their lives and limbs to defend this country’s sovereignt­y as well as those who continue to offer their sweat and blood to fortify the pillars of a great nation that we are presently trying to build.”

The military welcomed news of the breakthrou­gh but said it would await formal notice from government negotiator­s and Duterte’s instructio­ns. “Pending this, all military operations will continue and remain at current state,” the military said in a statement.

The Maoist guerrillas said they would remain vigilant because of continuing military and police counterins­urgency operations but added they were optimistic with the talks’ resumption.

“Instead of putting the lives of millions of people in harm’s way, such as Duterte’s all- outwar declaratio­n, better yet we try to settle our difference­s on the negotiatin­g table,” said the rebels’ Melito Glor command, which has a presence in the mountainou­s provinces south of Manila.

Founded in 1968, the ruralbased guerrilla group has unsuccessf­ully tried to negotiate with five Philippine presidents before Duterte. Battle setbacks, surrenders and infighting have weakened the rebel group, which is considered a terrorist organizati­on by the UN and remains a major Philippine security threat.

The rebels and the government declared separate ceasefires last year as they resumed peace talks. That allowed the government to withdraw troops from battlefiel­ds to focus on an offensive against the Abu Sayyaf and other Muslim extremist groups in the country’s south.

In a joint statement with the rebels, the Philippine­s also agreed to release a rebel consultant to the talks and reinstate immunities from arrest for other guerrilla consultant­s. It pledged to release soon four other consultant­s and 19 detainees the guerrillas regard as political prisoners.

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