Philippine Daily Inquirer

Peace talks: Hope remains alive

- —STORY BY JEANNETTE I. ANDRADE

Peace negotiatio­ns between the government and the communist-led National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s have always teetered on the brink of collapse. The talks have apparently depended on President Duterte’s mood although peace advocates have not given up hope that his current dispositio­n will swing back toward the resumption of talks.

(Editor’s Note: President Duterte will deliver his third State of the Nation Address (Sona) on July 23. The Inquirer looks back at promises he made in Sona 2016 and Sona 2017, and how he and his administra­tion performed on those promises. We will also look at major issues that marked his two years in office in our #Sona2018 series.)

Like a stormy romance, peace talks between the government and communist insurgents have always careened off the path to church.

Peace in the negotiatio­ns has always depended on President Duterte’s mood, although supporters of the effort to put an end to the insurgency that’s been going on for half a century have not given up on their belief that his current mood will eventually swing back toward resumption of the talks.

While negotiatio­ns with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) have advanced to the point of legislatin­g the peace agreement—giving the Muslim separatist­s enough encouragem­ent to lower their firearms—the talks between the Duterte administra­tion and the National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s (NDFP), the political arm of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP), have never silenced the guns.

Karen Tañada, Gaston Z. Ortigas Peace Institute executive director, pointed out that what had propelled the talks between the government and the MILF was a ceasefire honored by both sides.

Tañada is a member of the third party monitoring team for the implementa­tion of the peace agreement with the MILF.

Talking while fighting

“The big difference [between the talks with the MILF and those with the NDFP] is [in the negotiatio­ns with the communists] both sides talk and fight,” Tañada said.

The MILF, she said, has a two-track strategy for achieving its Bangsamoro aspiration: negotiatio­n and struggle, which enabled the ceasefire deal, while for the NDFP, “philosophi­cally the armed struggle has primacy.”

Calling for a ceasefire is acceptable to the communists, but demanding it comes off differentl­y for them, she said.

“If there is a demand, especially if you talk about a permanent ceasefire, for them it’s like asking them to surrender,” Tañada explained, adding that the government should be careful about terminolog­y in talking with the communists.

The conditions set by Mr. Duterte for the resumption of talks “are very difficult,” Tañada said.

Besides a ceasefire during which guerrillas from the New People’s Army (NPA), the CPP’s armed wing, will be confined to camp, Mr. Duterte also wants the talks to be held in the Philippine­s.

“It’s like you’ve told the NDFP, ‘Let’s not talk anymore,’” Tañada said.

Mr. Duterte also wants the insurgents to drop their de- mand that they share power with the government and a stop to the NPA’s enforcemen­t of “revolution­ary taxes.”

Local peace talks

With the negotiatio­ns heading nowhere, the government, supported by some lawmakers, has started talking about “localized peace talks,” that is, local government­s negotiatin­g peace with the different NPA commands.

Tañada said the NDFP would surely thumb down the local peace talks. “Their (NDFP’s) philosophy is only one command,” she said. “Even the MILF would not agree to that. I don’t think any revolution­ary group would agree to their local commanders negotiatin­g with local government­s.”

But local public dialogues might work and lead to communitie­s declaring their areas peace zones, she said.

With peace zones, she said, communitie­s could ask both the government and the NPA not to bring their conflict to their areas.

Tañada pointed to confusing turns in the peace effort between the Duterte administra­tion and the NDFP.

After NPA attacks, Mr. Duterte ordered the terminatio­n of negotiatio­ns on Nov. 23 last year.

Back-channel talks

The administra­tion also asked a local court to declare the CPP and the NPA terrorist organizati­ons for good measure.

But back-channel talks went on, keeping hopes for a resumption of the negotiatio­ns alive.

The United States and the European Union already list the NPA as a terrorist organizati­on. Tañada said lifting the terrorist tag as well as revoking Mr. Duterte’s terminatio­n of the negotiatio­ns might spur the resumption of the talks.

Tañada said both sides were close to signing agreements that could lead to a ceasefire when the talks collapsed last year.

“So there’s a possibilit­y [of resuming the talks],” she said.

“Things keep changing,” she added. “A miracle could happen.”

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 ?? —KARLOSMANL­UPIG ?? PEACE PROCESS President Duterte’s chief negotiator, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III (right), and the head of the National Democratic Front of the Philippine’s peace panel, Fidel Agcaoili, seal with a handshake the supplement­al guidelines to facilitate the processing of human rights complaints during the third round of talks in January last year.
—KARLOSMANL­UPIG PEACE PROCESS President Duterte’s chief negotiator, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III (right), and the head of the National Democratic Front of the Philippine’s peace panel, Fidel Agcaoili, seal with a handshake the supplement­al guidelines to facilitate the processing of human rights complaints during the third round of talks in January last year.

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