Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOV’T, REDS MOVE CLOSER TO CEASEFIRE

Negotiator­s seeking to end the communist insurgency have revived a year-old provisiona­l ceasefire agreement that does not compel rebels to surrender their arms but requires them to end their tax collection.

- STORY BY TONYS. BERGONIA

Government and communist rebel negotiator­s are on the verge of resuming formal peace talks after the two sides adopted an interim truce agreement that stopped short of requiring insurgents to lay down their arms.

The rebels, however, must end or suspend their collection of “revolution­ary tax.”

The provisiona­l agreement, according to Inquirer sources, was based on a broad outline of a bilateral ceasefire that the negotiatin­g panels of the government and National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s (NDFP) had agreed upon as early as last year.

The two-page document was signed on April 5, 2017, at The Hague by Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, head of the government panel, and its members—Hernani Braganza, Rene Sarmiento, Angela Trinidad and Antonio Arellano.

Fidel Agcaoili, the rebel pan- el chair, Julieta de Lima, Coni Ledesma, Asterio Palima and Benito Tiamzon signed for the NDFP, the umbrella group of local communist organizati­ons.

Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) founding chair Jose Maria Sison, the NDFP’s chief political consultant, and Presidenti­al Peace Adviser Jesus Dureza also signed the document.

One of the sources said the agreement had been set aside following President Duterte’s decision to cancel the talks last year but it was now being used as a “working guide” by the negotiator­s and served as the basis for the interim deal.

The agreement requires the ceasefire committees of both sides to meet separately to finalize guidelines for the truce to hold.

Revolution­ary tax

The source said one of the guidelines would cover what the rebels call “revolution­ary tax.”

The New People’s Army, the CPP’s armed wing, collects taxes from businessme­n and politician­s in areas where they oper- ate to raise funds for operations, food, supplies and aid to sympatheti­c communitie­s or to indemnify victims of crossfires.

The military calls the rebel taxation plain extortion.

One source involved in the ongoing back-channel talks in the Netherland­s said an alternativ­e that could convince the NPA to cease its tax collection was to replace the money the rebels collect with funds from other sources.

President Duterte has said the rebels must stop collecting revolution­ary taxes as a gesture of sincerity in the negotiatio­ns to peacefully end the nearly halfcentur­y Maoist insurgency.

The source said countries that supported the peace process could provide the funds.

“No [Philippine] govern- ment fund will be used,” the source stressed, although Mr. Duterte earlier said he was willing to finance food supplies for the rebels and the communitie­s they influenced.

“Donor countries” would be allowed to provide funding, but only for the noncombat needs of the rebels, the source said.

No country has yet been identified as a potential fund source, he added.

Just how much would be needed for the noncombat needs of the rebels for the duration of the talks was uncertain.

The military, quoted in a December 2017 report by the Inquirer, estimated that the NPA collects up to P460 million a year in revolution­ary taxes in Southern Mindanao alone.

‘Buffer zones’

Another Inquirer source said that under a formal ceasefire deal rebels and soldiers would be restricted to their camps or positions, which would be called “buffer zones.”

The rebels also cannot launch operations to enforce taxation, according to the source.

Suspending or ending rebel taxation would be crucial to meeting one of Mr. Duterte’s conditions for resuming negotiatio­ns—a cessation of hostilitie­s.

Both sides were also listing down what would be considered hostile acts during the implementa­tion of the formal ceasefire, the sources said.

Surrender of firearms

Government negotiator­s were trying to work around a key NDFP condition in the talks —that the rebels would not be required to surrender their weapons until a permanent peace deal had already been signed.

Braganza, who had been involved in the talks under Presidents Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Benigno Aquino III, said in an interview last year that he understood the rebel sentiment.

“We should not offer them terms of surrender,” said Braganza, a former youth activist during martial law.

“We are bringing to the table hope that we could work together to lift the people out of poverty, change the country,” Braganza said.

 ??  ?? RESURRECTE­D AGREEMENT In this April 5, 2017 photo, government and National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s negotiator­s shake hands on a joint ceasefire agreement they have recently revived to restart the stalled peace talks.
RESURRECTE­D AGREEMENT In this April 5, 2017 photo, government and National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s negotiator­s shake hands on a joint ceasefire agreement they have recently revived to restart the stalled peace talks.

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