Friday, April 12, 2013

ANAD: Reestablishment of the CPP--Legal Struggle

Posted to the Facebook page of the anti-communist ANAD (Apr 10): Reestablishment of the CPP: Legal Struggle
 
PADEPA 101

LESSON FOR THE DAY: April 10, 2013

THE REESTABLISHMENT OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE PHILIPPINES

... By Arthur J. Tariman
National Council Member, ANAD Party-list


Legal Struggle


On the other hand, CPP waged legal struggle mainly in four forms. First is the united front building and mass protests, second is the electoral struggle, third is the peace process, and fourth is the International Solidarity Works which is also a form of legal struggle. 
PPW’s secondary task is the development of the revolutionary underground and the broad anti-imperialist and democratic mass movement in the cities thru the building of a broad united front.

Under this context, PPW’s objective would be to isolate the government from the people and their support by using the methodology of arouse (should be read as agitate), organize and mobilize or AOM. 


Finally the organized masses are mobilized when they are called on in the conduct of mass protest actions against government.

Ultimately, PPW aims to divert the people’s support initially to the National Democratic Revolution and eventually to the CPP thru ideological, political and organizational works, in short, IPO.

In ideological work, the people’s rights are being championed thru AOM that the revolutionary ideology the Party embodies becomes acceptable to the masses.

In political work, the Party’s constant questioning of the government’s integrity weakens its hold on the people but strengthens the ties between the masses and the revolutionary movement.

In organizational work, the organized sectors are either directly or indirectly linked to the National United Front Commission (NUFC) and the National Organizational Department (NOD) of the CPP.
 
As a strategy, the Party would conduct IPO works on the basic sectors – the workers and the peasants – then builds an Echelon of Alliances and later forges tactical alliance with the Bangsamoro revolutionary groups in Mindanao like the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).


TOMORROW’S LESSON: Protracted People’s War
 

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