From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jun 10): NPA: Peace hopes dim
FIRING LINE Guerrillas of the New People’s Army, armed wing of the Communist
Party of the Philippines, form an assault line during a visit by journalists to
their camp at an undisclosed place in the Cordilleras. EV ESPIRITU/INQUIRER
NORTHERN LUZON
As far as communist rebels in the Cordilleras are concerned, the prospect of
forging a peace agreement with the Aquino administration is bleak, citing the
government’s failure to implement an initial accord on respect for human rights
and recent air strikes that left two teenagers wounded.
“We are always open to the resumption of peace talks, but it’s the government
that has made [this difficult] as it continues to commit rights abuses against
the people. This is the policy that was carried on by the Aquino administration
from the Arroyo administration, through its Oplan Bantay Laya,” said Diego
Wadagan, spokesman of the New People’s Army’s (NPA) Agustin Begnalen Command
operating in Abra.
In an interview with the Inquirer at an NPA upland camp last month, Wadagan
lamented that the government had failed to implement the Comprehensive Agreement
on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (Carhrihl), which
was signed by the Philippine government and the National Democratic Front (NDF)
in 1998.
According to the Philippine government website, www.gov.ph, the Carhrihl is
the first of four substantive peace agenda items that will constitute the final
peace settlement with the NDF to end the 44-year insurgency. Carhrihl, it said,
“seeks to uphold principles of human rights and international humanitarian law
in the context of armed conflict.”
Wadagan said the government’s counterinsurgency program, Oplan Bayanihan, had
resulted in more rights violations in communities where the military was
operating.
For example, the Abra Human Rights Alliance (Ahra) blamed the military for
wounding two minors, aged 13 and 17, when it launched air strikes that hit rice
fields and residential areas in the villages of Lat-ey and Alligang in
Malibcong, Abra, on May 31.
“We condemn these air strikes that hurt civilians and destroyed their sources
of livelihood. Even in times of armed conflict and counterinsurgency operations,
the military is bound by international human rights instruments and the Carhrihl
to void endangering the lives and dwellings of civilians,” Ahra said in a
statement.
Aside from failing to address rights abuses, the government refused to
recognize the political authority of the NDF in the peace process, said Tipon
Gil-ayab, spokesman of the NPA Lejo Cawilan Command operating in Kalinga.
“Now that the Carhrihl is not being implemented, how can the peace talks move
forward under this administration?” Gil-ayab said.
Stalled talks
The government panel negotiating peace with the CPP-NPA-NDF earlier announced
that it may no longer resume formal talks, which had been stalled for 22 months,
unless the government and the NDF agree on a new negotiating framework.
The Inquirer, since Friday, had been trying to reach officials of the Office
of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (Opapp) for updates on the
peace talks with communist rebels but did not get a response as of Sunday.
On its website, however, the Opapp reported that it had conducted basic
orientation seminars on Carhrihl for the military in 2012.
In an article posted on the Opapp website last month, Presidential Adviser on
the Peace Process Teresita Quintos Deles said talks with the CPP-NPA-NDF should
have a clear agenda for ending violence and bringing peace.
“Peace talks should have a clear relation to the reduction, if not the
cessation, of hostilities that can be felt by the people right away. We have
sensed a disconnect between the peace table and the situation on the ground, so
that more and more people have become skeptical about the peace process,” the
article quoted Deles as telling the Foreign Correspondents Association of the
Philippines (Focap) during a forum in Makati City in early May.
New approach
In that same article, Deles said a new approach in pursuing peace talks would
not involve the government panel in local peace processes.
“Local people have primacy over how they want peace to happen in their
areas,” she said.
She cited the concept of “peace zones” in Sagada, Mt. Province, and Tulunan,
North Cotabato, as examples of how locals can be instrumental in promoting peace
in their communities.
But Wadagan and Gil-ayab told the Inquirer that the CPP-NPA-NDF would never
participate in localized peace negotiations.
In a statement last week, Marie Hilao-Enriquez, chairperson of the human
rights group Karapatan, said the International Association of Democratic Lawyers
(IADL) had called on the Aquino administration to hold human rights violators
accountable and to continue peace negotiations.
“We call on the parties to resume the negotiations based on their previous
agreements to earnestly, patiently and sincerely address and comprehensively
resolve the underlying social, economic and political reasons for the armed
conflict and resistance,” the IADL said in its May 27 resolution.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/423467/npa-peace-hopes-dim
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.