Presidential Peace Adviser Jesus Dureza |
THE formal
resumption of peace negotiations between the government and communist rebels
will not proceed on June 28 as the Duterte administration wants to hold more
consultations with the public.
Presidential
Peace Adviser Jesus Dureza made the announcement last June 14, saying it is
important to get the support of the people in the process of finalizing a peace
deal with the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army-National
Democratic Front.
Dureza
said, it was President Rodrigo Duterte himself who issued the instruction last
June 13 for government negotiators, in cooperation with the private sector, to
engage the "general public as well as other sectors in government."
"Our
peace efforts to succeed should have good support from the general public,
hence, it is necessary that all efforts be exerted to inform and engage them in
the same way as the government engages the rebels in addressing the root causes
of conflict," Dureza said at a news conference in Malacañang.
"The
almost 50 years of intermittent and oftentimes disrupted peace negotiations
with the communist rebels across several presidencies need a close study for
lessons to learn from to ensure that our 'last chance' to put a dignified
closure to the armed rebellion will not be squandered away," he added.
Dureza
said the government has already informed the NDF and Norway, the third party
facilitator of the talks, about the development.
He
added that the government will have to make the “final call” on the resumption
of negotiations.
"We
are now at the cusp of some major breakthroughs in the peace talks, hence, the
urgent need now to take deliberate steps to ensure that we do not falter. Just
and sustainable and lasting peace will happen only when our people understand
and support these efforts," Dureza said.
Dureza
did not say if the concern raised by uniformed personnel during the command
conference in the Presidential Palace was a big factor in the decision to push
back the resumption of the talks.
Earlier
in the day, presidential spokesman Harry Roque said the military and police
expressed concern that in the past, the CPP-NPA will take advantage of peace
talks "to regroup and to strengthen their ranks."
Duterte
has invited CPP founding chairman Jose Maria Sison, who has been living in
self-imposed exile in The Netherlands, to return to the Philippines so they can
directly negotiate peace and oversee the talks during the 60-day period set by
the chief executive himself.
Sison
said he was willing to come home provided there would be significant
development in the peace negotiations and his lawyers are satisfied with legal
and security precautions.
Duterte
has repeatedly assured Sison that he will be safe should he return to the
Philippines and that he will be free to leave “unhampered and unfettered” even
if the negotiations fell through.
The
peace talks had been scuttled last November, which the government blamed on
continued attacks by the rebels on government troops and civilians. (Virgil
Lopez, GMA News / Google News – PH/MINDANAO EXPOSE’)
No comments:
Post a Comment