Jose Maria Sison has lambasted "the fake, the phony communists in China now". Photo: Reuters
Communist Party of the
“China is
obviously being greedy, claiming 90 per cent of the South China Sea,” Sison
told the South China Morning Post in his office
in Utrecht, the Netherlands, 43 years after his fledgling rebellion was
secretly sent weapons and cash by China’s late leader, Mao Zedong.
Sison called China ’s territorial claims “foolish” and “false”
and added that “it would be like India
claiming the whole of the Indian Ocean or Mexico
claiming all or most of the Gulf of Mexico .”
Sison denied this
was a major change in the party’s attitude towards the dispute. “The Communist
Party of the Philippines (CPP) has been consistent in asserting national
independence and maintaining the territorial integrity and even when there is a
coincidence with regard to the national government on territory, the CPP does
not mind having the same position as the national government,” he said
“Because if you
don’t defend the territory, nothing might be left if you neglect it.”
When Sison broke
away from the old Philippine communist party to form his own, his new group -
the CPP and its armed wing the New People’s Army (NPA) - adopted Mao’s
protracted people’s war.
Despite the fact
that Mao established diplomatic relations with dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who
had Sison arrested, tortured and tried for rebellion, Sison continues to follow
the Maoist doctrine. In fact, he criticises the present Chinese leadership for
veering away from Mao’s vision.
“I think the
Philippine communist party is more loyal to Mao than the pseudo communists, the
fake, the phony communists in China
now,” Sison said.
He traced the
latter’s abandonment of “real communism” to “the counter-revolution of Deng
Xiaoping [which] was quite successful. There was a coup in 1976 and by 1978 the
transformation of China
into a capitalist society went in earnest. And what you have [today] is a
capitalist country.”
When asked
whether he could achieve victory in his lifetime, Sison, now 76 and living
exile in Utrecht ,
said: “Maybe you know, I could have died as soon as the party launched the
armed struggle [in 1969]. The communist spirit is to ‘do what you can, do your
best while you can’.”
His group has had
setbacks lately. The central party chairman Benito Tiamzon and his wife Wilma
Austria, the party secretary-general, were arrested a year ago. Last month, soldiers
killed veteran NPA commander Leoncio Pitao.
Now Sison is
offering President Benigno Aquino a truce and peace talks which he hopes would
include the release of the Tiamzon couple so they can take part in the peace
process.
“The special
envoy of the Norwegian government has been kind enough to propose the procedure
for making sure that the agreements are made,” Sison said.
He expressed
confidence that a truce could be put in place before the year’s end, followed
by an agreement on social and political reforms.
“Aquino may want
to leave a good legacy [and] I would be happy to strike an agreement to make
peace,” he said.
“The agreements
can be so worded that only the most reactionary and the most subservient to the
narrowest interest of foreign and feudal domination would be against it,” he
said.
In an interview
with the Post in April, Aquino said of the
peace process: “We were exploring that special track that was proposed by Jose
Maria Sison. They left the negotiations - the informal track and the formal track.
Now, they say they are ready for it again. I think they have to demonstrate
sincerity first.”
When pressed
whether there was a chance for negotiations to resume, Aquino replied: “I’m
having a briefing on that this afternoon.”
http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/1842975/exiled-philippine-communist-leader-sison-blasts-greedy
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