The Star Malaysia

Duterte orders truce for Xmas

President declares 10-day ceasefire for ‘stress-free’ celebratio­ns Indonesia aims for 7 million Bali tourists

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has declared a 10-day unilateral ceasefire with communist rebels to allow Filipinos to celebrate a “stress-free” Christmas season, two weeks after peace talks with the insurgents were formally scrapped.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said Duterte had ordered the army and police to suspend offensive operations from Dec 24 to Jan 2 “to lessen the apprehensi­on of the public this Christmas season”.

He said he expected the Maoists and their political leaders to “do a similar gesture of goodwill.”

There was no immediate comment from the communist rebel movement, whose top leaders and negotiator­s have been living in exile in The Netherland­s since the late 1980s.

Duterte restarted a stalled peace process and freed several communist leaders as a gesture of good faith when he came to office last year but he recently abandoned talks due to escalating rebel attacks.

He has vented his fury on a near-daily basis at what he considers duplicity by the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and its armed wing, the New People’s Army.

He has collective­ly declared them a “terrorist organisati­on” and has ended the three-decades peace process.

The rebel forces, estimated to number around 3,000, have been waging a protracted guerrilla warfare in the countrysid­e for nearly 50 years in a conflict that has killed more than 40,000 people and stifled growth in resource-rich areas of the Philippine­s.

The guerrillas have been targeting mines, plantation­s, constructi­on and telecommun­ication companies, demanding “revolution­ary taxation” to finance arms purchases and recruitmen­t activities.

Duterte on Tuesday night said he only wanted Filipinos to celebrate a “stress-free” Christmas.

“I do not want to add more strain to what people are now suffering,” he told reporters. — Reuters JAkArtA: The Tourism Ministry has set a target to attract 7 million foreign tourists to Bali next year.

Tourism Minister Arief Yahya said the target was not reduced as the number of foreign tourists visiting Bali were lower when compared to 25 million and 32 million foreign tourist arrivals in Malaysia and Thailand, respective­ly.

He said that Bangkok welcomed 18 million tourists per year, adding that Bali actually had more to offer than the capital of Thailand.

Tempo.co reported that the ministry’s target to attract 6 million foreign tourists to Bali in 2017 would not be achieved.

As of October, Bali had actually welcomed 5 million foreign tourists. However, the recent volcanic activity of Mount Agung in Karangasem saw the rate of foreign tourist arrivals slow.

Arief said that although the ministry had failed to achieve its target, the Bali administra­tion’s target of attracting 5.5 million foreign tourists had been achieved.

To boost tourist arrivals, the ministry is currently spending Rp 100bil (RM30mil) to promote Bali. — The Jakarta Post/Asia News Network

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