The CPP says it does not expect a meaningful outcome in the near future
On their 46th anniversary on Friday, December 26, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) announced there are "ongoing peace negotiations" with the Aquino government, adding that it's looking forward to a truce with the military.
The CPP said that
while it does not expect a meaningful outcome in the near future, it believes
the talks could pave the way for the party to eventually lead government, the
ultimate goal of the 46-year-old communist movement. (READ: Hope springs eternal for talks with Reds)
"There
should be no illusion that the ongoing peace negotiations with the reactionary
government will soon lead to comprehensive agreements on social, economic and
political problems as basis for a just and lasting peace," the CPP said in
a statement published on its website on Friday.
“What is good
about the peace negotiations is that the NDFP (National Democratic Front of the
Philippines) is able to broadcast the Program for a People’s Democratic
Revolution and help bring about the victory of the revolution in the long run
or before then help bring about truce and cooperation with a government that is
not led by the Party but which adopts patriotic and progressive policies to
deal with the severe crisis brought about by imperialism and reaction,"
the statement added.
'Protracted
war'
The CPP's
political wing, the National Democratic Front (NDF), is returning to the
negotiating table after two years of impasse in the talks, a government source
earlier told Rappler. This was earlier confirmed by CPP founder Jose Maria
Sison, who said this may happen after Pope
Francis's visit to the Philippines in January.
During this
period, the CPP called on its members to step up its "protracted people’s
war against US
imperialism and the local exploiting classes of big compradors and
landlords." (READ: AFP to communist rebels: End senseless attacks)
The CPP dismissed
the country's much celebrated economic growth as a bubble and opposed moves to
amend the 1987 Constitution to scrap foreign ownership limits.
Reduce violence?
The CPP is behind
Asia 's longest-running insurgency. It has
weakened from its 25,000 armed regulars in the '80s to its current 4,000 –
based on military estimates – but occasional violence in the countryside has
kept investors away from the rural communities, mostly in eastern Mindanao where the communist movement has strongest
presence.
Secretary
Teresita "Ging" Deles of the Office of the Presidential Adviser on
the Peace Process has been vocal in saying what she wants is to end the violent
attacks by the CPP's armed wing, the New People's Army (NPA), against
government troops and businesses.
However, it still
needs to be seen how this is going to be implemented on the ground. Among the
reasons the talks collapsed in 2013 was the refusal of the NDF to agree to a
ceasefire and the refusal of the government to terminate programs that the CPP
opposed – the Conditional Cash Transfer program and the military's Oplan
Bayanihan counter-insurgency campaign plan – and the release of detained NDF consultants.
"The biggest
obstacle in the peace negotiations is the anti-national, anti-democratic and
anti-people character of the reactionary government and its current officials
who regard the negotiations as the means for the capitulation and pacification
of the revolutionary forces and the people," the CPP said in the
statement.
While it supports
the truce, the CPP statement called on its members to work harder in recruiting
and indoctrinating more people.
"The
Communist Party of the Philippines
must be able to expand and strengthen itself substantially in the next year or
so in order to shoulder the task of carrying forward the revolutionary struggle
to new heights," it said.
"The
students and intellectuals must be mobilized in a big way in order to wage a
propaganda war against the political, ideological and philosophical line
promoted by the apologists of imperialist neo-liberalism.The Party must lead in
efforts to study the history of US colonization and aggression in order to fire
up the spirit of patriotism among the current generation of youth," it
added.
'Aquino is worse than Arroyo'
In its
anniversary statement, the CPP also criticized President Aquino, saying he is
worse than former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in violating existing
agreements.
"The Aquino
regime is definitely far worse than the Arroyo regime in imprisoning far more
people on trumped-up multiple charges of rebellion and common crimes in
violation of the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and
International Humanitarian Law and the Hernandez political offense
doctrine," the CPP said, citing the detention of 14 political consultants
"The Aquino
regime is fundamentally as bad as the Arroyo regime in allowing illegal
detention, torture, extrajudicial killings, forced evacuations, landgrabbing
from the peasants and repression of workers and their trade unions," it
added.
The CPP continued
to attack his policies of and celebrated ouster calls against him.
"The
Filipino people must wage ever-intensifying mass struggles in order to muster
enough strength to force Aquino out of power." it said.
"The
corruption of the Aquino regime knows no limits. It extends to all supply
contracts with the civilian and military agencies of the reactionary
government, the finances and operations of the government-owned corporations,
the infrastructure projects under the Private-Public Partnership Program and
the Conditional Cash Transfer and PAMANA doleouts," it added.
The CPP also vows
to be active in the 2016 presidential elections by exposing it as a
"farce," but at the same time take advantage by getting more seats in
Congress and local governments.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/79017-cpp-peace-negotiations-anniversary
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