The Philippine Star

Hopes dim for peace talks with Reds — Bello

- By MAYEN JAYMALIN – With Michael Punongbaya­n, Edith Regalado, Jose Rodel Clapano

After the New People’s Army (NPA) torched 10 heavy equipment units on Easter Sunday in Davao City, the prospect of resuming talks with communist rebels is getting dimmer.

Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, who serves as government peace panel chair, said the Communist Party of the Philippine­s-National Democratic Front (CPP-NDF) and the combatant unit NPA failed to prove their sincerity in pursuing peace talks with the government.

“For me, I cannot feel their sincerity because lately they burned equipment in Mindanao. They still lack in sincerity,” Bello said yesterday, noting that President Duterte needs to see this before deciding to talk peace.

He added that he would not recommend the resumption of the talks if Duterte will ask him.

“It has always been the statement of the President that he will pursue talks if the other party shows sincerity in pursuing talks to its logical conclusion. Show sincerity and we will talk again,” he stressed.

The Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) branded the move as “an attack on the people” as Lt. Gen. Benjamin Madrigal Jr., Eastern Mindanao Command chief, ordered his men in the 10th Infantry Division to go after the perpetrato­rs.

AFP spokesman Major Ezra Balagtey said the communist rebels torched the heavy equipment that included four dump trucks and a backhoe, which were used for the constructi­on of the Davao City bypass road in Barangays Callawa, Buhangin and Fatima.

Nothing but cowards

Presidenti­al daughter and Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio also condemned the destructio­n, saying the NPA revolution already “undermines our democracy and developmen­t through its brand of egregious violence and extremism.”

“The attacks were downright cowardly and indicate that the NPA is nothing but a terrorist group that deserves our collective rejection and condemnati­on,” Carpio said in a statement yesterday.

No preconditi­on

Meanwhile, NDF peace panel chairman Fidel Agcaoili said the communist rebels are still open to resuming talks if there is no preconditi­on.

He said in an interview with ANC yesterday that the NDF is still in possession of the draft documents the two panels were about to discuss before the government cancelled the peace talks in November last year.

“No preconditi­ons. We sit down and talk on the basis of the three agreements, drafts we have prepared in October, which should have been discussed in November… By this time, we would have what was offered or proposed by the government – a unilateral coordinate­d ceasefire,” he added.

The documents, he pointed out, pertain to a coordinate­d ceasefire, general amnesty for political prisoners and those that were agreed upon by the reciprocal working committees.

Agcaoili stressed that the government’s efforts in asking the courts to formally declare as terrorists the CPP and the NPA are a hindrance that has to be dealt with in the backchanne­l discussion­s.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque earlier said there must be an “enabling environmen­t” before the government returns to the negotiatin­g table.

She noted that it stalled road constructi­on works and delayed the delivery of basic services – health, education, agricultur­al developmen­t and livelihood – in the affected areas, adding that the road projects could change people’s lives people for the better.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines