The Borneo Post

Duterte orders truce with communist rebels

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the military to suspend operations against communist rebels over Christmas, the government said yesterday, despite ending peace talks and branding the insurgents ‘ terrorists’.

“This unilateral ceasefire would lessen the apprehensi­on of the public this Christmas season,” Duterte’s spokesman Harry Roque said in a statement, adding the government expects the rebels to make ‘a similar gesture of goodwill’.

The “suspension of offensive military operations”, which will be in effect from Dec 24 to Jan 2, has been a customary move by both sides since the launch of formal talks in the late 1980s.

The 48-year- old conf lict in the largely Catholic nation is one of Asia’s longest- running insurgenci­es and has claimed 30,000 lives by the government’s count.

However, Duterte cancelled peace talks last month and formally designated the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and its 3,800member armed wing the New People’s Army as “terrorist organisati­ons”.

He has also used the communists’ guerrilla activities as a justificat­ion for prolonging martial law over the southern third of the country until Dec 31 next year.

Martial rule, which he proclaimed in May to combat Islamic militants who seized the southern city of Marawi, was initially set to end on Dec 31 after the defeat of the militants.

Duterte did not declare a Christmas truce with other armed groups, including selfprocla­imed armed supporters of the Islamic State group still operating in the south.

Duterte’s election last year revived hopes for successful negotiatio­ns as the president is a self- declared socialist who has

This unilateral ceasefire would lessen the apprehensi­on of the public this Christmas season. Harry Roque, Duterte’s spokesman

said it is his “dream” to forge peace in the country.

But he cancelled peace talks in November after a rebel ambush in the southern Philippine­s killed a police officer and a fourmonth- old baby.

Duterte has also accused the communists of plotting with his political rivals to destabilis­e his rule.

He has since ordered the arrest of more than a dozen rebel leaders freed last year, and has threatened to shut down mining companies that yield to insurgents’ demands for money. — AFP

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 ??  ?? File photo shows Duterte (left) holding a .45 caliber handgun, one of 3,000 units handed over during a ceremonial turn-over to the military, at Malacanang Palace as military chief Eduardo Ano (right) looks on. — AFP photo
File photo shows Duterte (left) holding a .45 caliber handgun, one of 3,000 units handed over during a ceremonial turn-over to the military, at Malacanang Palace as military chief Eduardo Ano (right) looks on. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows guerrillas from the New People’s Army (NPA) in formation in the Sierra Madre mountain range, located east of Manila. — AFP photo
File photo shows guerrillas from the New People’s Army (NPA) in formation in the Sierra Madre mountain range, located east of Manila. — AFP photo

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