Peace begets human rights and Duterte’s ceasefire declaration
>> Monday, August 22, 2016
HAPPY WEEKEND
By Gina Dizon
It was not long ago in the late 1980s when angry and grieving Sagada
on the death of three children caught at the height of communist insurgency
in this northern part of the county unilaterally declared a demilitarized zone. The people did not want their
community to be disturbed and endangered and afraid. The people wanted to move
about freely in their immediate surroundings and work safely in the fields
where agricultural lots are found in mountainsides.
This part of Sagada’s history
makes a vivid example of what President Rodrigo Duterte wants to happen in
the country with his declaration of ceasefire with the Communist Party of the Philippines
-New Peoples Army (CPP-NPA) and expects the latter to do the same.
A people
living in peace to enable livelihood and overall economy for the country.
And here in Sagada 27 years back, a petition was then forwarded by the people for the
demilitarization of the town referring to the total pull out from all armed
groups within the municipality’s geographical jurisdiction. The petition
directed to the Philippine Army and
to New Peoples Army demanded the following- no armed conflict and no detachment
of both AFP and NPA inside Sagada, no harassment and searches of contending
forces, and that Sagada be a designated area for peaceful negotiation.
From the remote
Sagada in the northern part of this agricultural country to southern Mindanao, peace is long
sought for.
Sagada as a peace zone was
eventually recognized in 1993 by Senate Resolution 435 forwarded by then Senator
Rodolfo Biazon which identified Sagada as a special development area along with
six other special development areas in the country, and each area allotted a P5
million development fund. And so the long controversial P5 million waterworks
in town.
The National Unification
Commission then conducted public consultations in the country to find ways and
means to attain lasting peace and reconciliation; and noted that internal armed
conflict has hampered the economic development of the government particularly
that of infrastructure, education and basic services.
The peace zone was violated in
different times. This alarmed the
people and when people see military forces would tell them to get out because Sagada is a peace zone.
The reasons are basically calls
for peace for people to move about freely, safely and unthreatened of
danger in their surroundings.
In the same case that nearby
folks in Bontoc wanted the
NPA to leave Bontoc following the death of five soldiers due to an ambush
staged by the rebels in barangay Mainit five
years ago. People here
wanted to move about safely to breathe and work in their localities.
Sagada and Bontoc are two among
agricultural towns of Mountain
Province where armed forces from opposing AFP and NPA camps finds incidents of fighting
each other. These remote areas locates people working in
the fields who want their community demilitarized and armed forces not seen in their vicinities.
And now with the declaration of
ceasefire with the CPP-NPA by
President Rodrigo Duterte.
Duterte laid the ground to make
peace happen- peace talks with
CPP founder Joma Sison, friendly relations with left leaning activists,
and entering the camp of the
Moro Islamic Liberation Front and talking peace with them.
All marred by the death of one
and the wounding of four elements
of the Citizen Armed Force Geographical Unit (CAFGU) due an ambush staged by the CPP-NPA at Davao del Norte just two days after the
declaration of ceasefire with the rebel group by President Duterte.
This resulting to the immediate
lifting of the declaration by the President himself after failure of the
CPP-NPA to issue a mutual ceasefire.
For what could have been a smooth transition to peace
was rattled with this CAFGU
ambush whatever could have been the reason to weaken the peace process.
Sincerity is a question.
Sincerity is seen in the pronouncement of Duterte for a ceasefire with the CPP-NPA
along with other indications as accommodating the left in his Cabinet. It is a
question if structures under Duterte have
accordingly done their part.
Sincerity on the part of the
CPP-NDF is also a question much as they were on the offensive when the incident happened, though claimed that
the Philippine Army were the ones on the offensive.
The military have their side of the story.
Calls for ceasefire present a
situation where both armed groups are on the active-defense mode wary on any
incident which could kill their ranks. This calling for the need to investigate
the incident what group could have triggered the incident to happen on whether
it was planned and deliberate or it just happened considering given situations.
Where it may have been planned determines what could be the sincerity or insincerity
of either group.
Peace talks between the
Philippine government and
the CPP-NPA are scheduled August 20, enough
time for both sides to see where the loopholes were in the Davao del Norte ambush incident towards a common objective of
making hard core ideologies and policies pro- people and pro-country happen both from the sides of
government and CPP-NPA.
And people shall be waiting for
concrete and sincere agreements and results
towards a lasting peace that every country- loving Filipino want to happen.
For what could be a reason to
fight or make peace than to fight or make peace for the country, not for the
self nor any ideology per se but for a community where people could breathe and
move about freely enjoying their rights to life, liberty, livelihood and property to add to a just governance where public funds
redound to whom these should redound to – the people.
Unless it is a fight for power.
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