Archbishop Antonio Ledesma of Cagayan de Oro on Sunday leads peace advocates in calling for the resumption of negotiations between the government and communist rebels (Photo by D'Jay Lazaro)
The Philippine government on Monday said it is open to renewed talks with the communist-led National Democratic Front of the
Government peace adviser Teresita Deles made the statement
in response to calls from religious groups on Sunday for the government and the
rebels to go back to the negotiating table.
The Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform, the largest
ecumenical network of various church leaders in the country, called on the
government and the front "to return to the negotiating table to address
the substantive issues that remain as the root cause of armed conflict in our
country".
"Peace may be elusive, but it can be achieved if the
parties [involved in] the conflict engage in principled negotiations,"
said Bishop Deogracias Iniguez of Kalookan, a platform member.
Deles told ucanews.com that the government is "willing
to resume talks" but that they should be "agenda-bound and
time-bound".
"We want talks that will prosper," she said.
The government signed a landmark deal with the rebel Moro
Islamic Liberation Front in Mindanao in March, but formal talks with the
Communist Party of the Philippines
and its armed wing, the New People's Army, have stalled since 2011.
"We have discussed possibilities [with mediators]. If
they will be able to find a way that will not be contradictory to our
direction, then we can have talks," said Deles.
In a statement, rebel spokesman Luis Jalandoni blamed the
government for the impasse. He said government negotiators refused to honor
previous agreements on human rights, security and immunity guarantees entered
into by both parties in the 1990s.
The impasse saw the suspension of the next substantive issue
on the negotiating table, the Comprehensive Agreement on Socio-Economic
Reforms.
Deles said the agenda for the talks should be on
"doable reforms" because "peace talks are about political
settlement" and it is important for people's concerns to be brought out
during the negotiations.
The Philippines military estimates that the country's
communist movement has about 4,000 armed men under its command, compared to
more than 26,000 at its peak 30 years ago.
But the rebels still hold considerable sway in poor, rural
areas where they receive material and moral support from a population that has
endured the brunt of the Philippines '
widening divide between rich and poor.
http://www.ucanews.com/news/manila-open-to-renewed-talks-with-communist-rebels/72004
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