Philippine Daily Inquirer

Rody to release jailed Reds even before amnesty

- By Karlos Manlupig Inquirer Mindanao

DAVAO CITY—Incoming President Rodrigo Duterte will order the unconditio­nal release of several political prisoners as a “gesture of goodwill” by his administra­tion in upcoming peace talks with the communistl­ed National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s (NDFP), according to his chief peace negotiator.

The prisoners will be freed once Duterte formally assumes the presidency on June 30 and even before he signs a general amnesty for all political detainees, subject to Congress approval, incoming Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, who will head the new government peace panel in the talks,

said on Tuesday.

Bello was part of the team sent by the President-elect to Oslo, Norway, last week, which met with NDFP representa­tives led by Luis Jalandoni and Fidel Agcaoili for preliminar­y talks to clear the way for the resumption of formal negotiatio­ns to end one of the world’s longest-running communist insurgenci­es.

With Bello were incoming peace adviser Jesus Dureza and former Agrarian Reform Secretary Hernani Braganza, who was among the representa­tives of the Aquino administra­tion to back-channel talks with the NDFP in 2014.

Also present during the meeting were Jose Maria Sison, founding chair of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and NDFP consultant, and Ambassador Elisabeth Slattum, Norway’s special envoy to the peace process.

Oslo statement

In a joint statement signed by both parties after the meeting, the Duterte team agreed to recommend the immediate release of all NDFP consultant­s and other prisoners covered by the Jasig ( Joint Agreement on Security and Immunity Guarantees) so they could participat­e in the peace negotiatio­ns.

Jasig, which guarantees protection of NDFP and government negotiator­s and consultant­s from arrest during the peace process, was signed by the government and the NDFP peace panels in 1995 to allow them to freely participat­e in the peace process.

Alleged violations of the agreement, including the arrests of NDFP consultant­s, were among the major reasons for the collapse of the talks under the Aquino administra­tion.

After the Oslo meeting, the Duterte administra­tion and the NDFP expect formal peace negotiatio­ns to resume in the third week of July.

“We seek the release of political prisoners who are reportedly covered by Jasig. Those who are elderly and sick will also be released for humanitari­an considerat­ions,” Bello said.

18 NDFP consultant­s

Bello did not give any names in the initial batch of political prisoners to be released before the issuance of a general amnesty.

But a militant human rights group, Karapatan, had earlier said 18 NDFP consultant­s were among at least 543 political prisoners held in various prisons in the country.

It identified them as Tirso Alcantara, Emeterio Antalan, Ma. Concepcion Araneta-Bocala, Kennedy Bangibang, Leopoldo Caloza, Pedro Codaste, Edgardo Friginal, Renante Gamara, Alan Jazmines, Ernesto Lorenzo, Ma. Loida Magpatoc, Alfredo Mapano, Ruben Saluta, Eduardo Sarmiento, Adelberto Silva, Jaime Soledad, and Benito and Wilma Tiamzon.

Karapatan said that of the total number of political prisoners, 88 were ill while 48 others are in their senior years.

Bello said the release of the political prisoners would be done without preconditi­ons.

“We are doing it before the proposed amnesty. This will be a gesture of goodwill,” he said.

The peace agenda agreed upon by the Duterte team and the NDFP included the affirmatio­n of previously signed agreements like the Comprehens­ive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law.

Other main points were the accelerate­d process for negotiatio­ns, including the timeline for the completion of the remaining substantiv­e issues—“socioecono­mic reforms, political and constituti­onal reforms, and end of hostilitie­s and dispositio­n of forces.”

The mode of the interim ceasefire, as well as mechanisms and coverage of the agreement, will also be tackled.

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