By Gina
Dizon
BONTOC, Mountain Province – Groups here
called for resumption of peace talks between the National Democratic
Front and Philippine Government during a rally here July 2 following the
recent ambush on policemen by communist rebels in Tadian, Mountain Province
wherein one cop died while nine others were wounded.
The Episcopal Church of the Philippines
diocesan Bishop Brent Alawas said peace talks would pave the way to stop
hostilities between the government and the NDF-Communist Party of the
Philippines-New People’s Army.
The march-rally called by Gov. Leonard Mayaen
condemned the June 28 ambush of the NPA against 95 cops.
In said event, Alawas urged both sides- the
NPA-CPP-NDF and Philippine Government to “return to the negotiating
table and resume peace negotiations as soon as
possible.”
“The resumption of the peace talks will
provide another chance for peace to prevail. It will give us a reason to hope that
the root causes of the festering problems besetting our province will be
addressed in a peaceful way,” Alawas told students, government officials and
folks who joined the march-rally.
The NDF-CPP-NPA and the Philippine
Government had not been talking formal peace talks since 2004 when Norway
facilitated the talks.
The GRP panel tried to convince the NDF to
give up ‘preconditions’ for talks to resume but failed referring to the release
of detained political consultants of the NDF.
Other “preconditions” include the demands
of the NDF on the abolition of peace and development
programs, such as the conditional cash transfer, Pamana and OplanBayanihan as
claimed by resigned GRP peace negotiator Alex Padilla.
Cordillera Peoples Democratic Front spokesperson
Simon ‘Ka Filiw’ Naogsan however said these were not “preconditions as these are already
agreed upon concerns to be included in further talks as contained
in an earlier agreement -- the Oslo Joint Statement of 21
February 2011 which called for both parties to resume
talks.
Peace talks for the past 27 years
resulted to substantive agenda of the 1992 Hague Joint Declaration
which resulted to the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights
and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL).
The agreement includes a Joint Monitoring
Committee to address human rights violations of either party. Though the CARHRIHL Joint Monitoring Committee (JMC) has
not been convening and talks have collapsed with both sides accusing each
other of “insincerity.”
Four substantive agenda cap peace talks: the
comprehensive agreement on socio- economic reforms (CASER), respect of human
rights and international humanitarian law, constitutional and political reform,
and the cessation of hostilities.
During said rally, Alawas called on
both sides- the NDF and the GRP to stop violence and pave the
way for dialogue, “which if pursued with sincerity and without
reservation, could lead to the establishment of a genuine and lasting peace.”
Tribal elder and member of the peace
and order committee of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan Alfonso Kiatong also called
for negotiation to resolve conflicts of both sides.
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