From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jul 17): General in ‘Morong 43’ case to NPA rebels: Try our peace package
Brigadier General Aurelio B Baladad (left) receiving the command symbol of 3rd
Infantry Division, Philippine Army from Lt. Gen. Noel A Coballes (right), Army
Commanding General, in turnover rites on Tuesday in Camp Gen Macario Peralta in
Capiz. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Brigadier General Aurelio Baladad, one of the officers charged with alleged
torture and illegal arrest of supposed health workers popularly known as the
“Morong 43,” vowed to use “pressure” on communist rebels to end their
decades-long armed struggle.
“We will apply pressure on them so that they will renounce violence [and]
will be forced to go back to the mainstream of society,” the newly installed
commander of the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division told INQUIRER.net in a phone
interview Wednesday.
Baladad assumed his new post at Camp Peralta in Capiz on Tuesday, replacing
Major General Jose Mabanta who retired last month. As commander of 3ID, he will
be in charge of internal security operations in Western Visayas. He was
previously the deputy chief of staff for Operations at Camp Aguinaldo (J3).
Brigadier General Rodelio Santos, former chief of Joint Peace Security
Coordinating Councils, replaced Baladad as deputy chief of staff for Operations.
Baladad said that there are more rebels returning to the government fold to
avail themselves of the peace package.
“Why not renounce the armed violence… there are other ways to solve problems
and it’s not through violence,” he said.
The Army general, a member of the Philippine Military Academy Class of 1982,
was then a colonel when he headed the Army’s 202nd Brigade which captured
suspected communist rebels in Morong town in Rizal. The captured persons, who
claimed they were health workers, were later known as Morong 43.
Government security forces said they recovered subversive documents and
firearms and accused the supposed health workers of assembling explosive devices
during the raid on a residential compound in Morong.
Five of the health workers later admitted they were NPA members. They were
convinced to obtain the government’s amnesty program. Last year, six of the
Morong 43 reportedly rejoined their armed comrades. The rest were released after
the government withdrew the charges against them.
“Five of them said there was no torture. Bakit konti lang sa kanila ang
nagreklamo. Nasaan yung iba, nasa bundok na ulit sila (Why only a few were
complaining. Where are the rest, back in the mountains?)” he said.
Baladad also said he is aiming to transform Western Visayas into “more
peaceful and development-ready [region],” especially in Negros Oriental.
“Tama na ang barilan (enough of fighting). Let’s talk so we can have a more
peaceful society,” he urged the rebels, emphasizing that achieving peace is not
purely a military solution.
“Mga kapatid din natin yan, at ang sagot ay hindi armed struggle (They
(rebels) are also our brothers, and the answer is not armed struggle),” he
added.
“The key here is there should be a peaceful atmosphere for development to
foster. [In the absence of a secure environment], there is not much
development…,” he said.
With still about 418 communist rebels entrenched in Western Visayas, Baladad
said they are looking to make them insignificant by 2016, the same timeframe
that the military is targeting to defeat communist rebels.
At present, the Armed Forces of the Philippines is facing the challenge of
making about 4,000 rebels irrelevant by 2016 through its anti-insurgency
strategy Internal Peace Security Plan Bayanihan.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/446889/general-in-morong-43-case-to-npa-rebels-try-our-peace-package
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