Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘No stand down order, no letup in war on NPA’

- By Delfin T. Mallari Jr. @dtmallarij­rINQ —WITH REPORTS FROM KRIXIA SUBINGSUBI­NG ANDALLANNA­WAL

The military would continue its operations against New People’s Army (NPA) until it was ordered to stand down, Armed Forces of the Philippine­s chief of staff Lt. Gen. Carlito Galvez said on Saturday.

“Let’s keep pushing on. We will not stand down,” Galvez told troops at the military’s Southern Luzon Command (Solcom) headquarte­rs in Lucena City.

Galvez lauded the Army’s 2nd Infantry Division (ID) for what he said were counterins­urgency operations and conferred decoration­s, including a Gold Cross Medal, to soldiers for gallantry in action.

Solcom chief Lt. Gen. Danilo Pamonag presented to Galvez several firearms and ammunition recovered by troops from NPA rebels in Bicol and Southern Tagalog regions.

‘White areas’

He reminded soldiers, though, that cities in Southern Tagalog remained to be “white areas” or those where rebels enjoy substantia­l support.

Maj. Gen. Rhoderick Parayno, 2nd ID chief, said soldiers would continue counterins­urgency operations “until such time that President Duterte orders us to stand down.”

Galvez made the statements as the government and National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s (NDFP) prepared to sign next month an interim peace agreement (IPA) ahead of formal peace talks.

The IPA was meant to pave the way for a formal ceasefire between the military and NPA during the duration of the formal peace talks.

In preparatio­n for the talks, several detained rebel leaders had asked courts to grant them bail so they could travel to the Netherland­s to take part in the talks.

Top rebels

Communist Party of the Philippine­s central committee members, Rafael Baylosis and Alan Jazmines, asked courts in Taguig and Quezon City to grant them bail and allow them to travel to Utrecht for the talks on June 5 to 9.

The two were among NDFP consultant­s who were supposed to take part in negotiatio­ns on “finishing touches” of the IPA.

Aside from Baylosis and Jazmines, four other rebel leaders—Benito Tiamzon, Adelberto Silva, Vicente Ladlad and Randall Echanis—had also asked the court to grant them bail to join the talks, according to NDFP lawyer Edre Olalia.

But just as the rebel leaders sought temporary liberty, another was captured by the military during an operation in Butuan City.

Maj. Ezra Balagtey, spokespers­on for the Eastern Mindanao Command in Davao City, said Nerita Calamba de Castro, allegedly a key finance officer of NPA in Mindanao, had been arrested during an operation in Butuan City.

 ?? —ERWIN MASCARIÑAS ?? FEAR OF CROSSFIRE Clashes in February between government soldiers and communist rebels lead to evacuation­s in Lanuza town, Surigao del Sur province, forcing this family of evacuees to seek shelter far from the fighting.
—ERWIN MASCARIÑAS FEAR OF CROSSFIRE Clashes in February between government soldiers and communist rebels lead to evacuation­s in Lanuza town, Surigao del Sur province, forcing this family of evacuees to seek shelter far from the fighting.

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