Army, Cordi leaders press localized peace talks with NPA rebels
>> Friday, July 27, 2018
BAGUIO
CITY -- The 5th Infantry Division of the Philippine Army and the
Cordillera Regional Development Council both expressed support to the plan of
the Dept. of National Defense and Armed Forces of the Philippines to pursue
localized peace talks with the communist groups or the New People's Army.
The RDC approved the
move in a recent meeting.
In a statement,
Capt. Jeffrey Somera, chief of the 5th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office,
said unit commander Major Gen. Perfecto Rimando backs the said program, given
the distinct cultures of Filipinos.
The Army's 5th Infantry
Division operates in Cordillera and Region 2.
The Army division
chief’s statement came as the DND and AFP leadership recommended that a much
practical approach be undertaken to end the communist influence in the
countryside.
"We should not
single out the approach in relation to peace talks because the approach applied
in one area might not be appropriate in another area," Rimando said.
"Localized peace
talks is the better alternative, since the communist terrorists here in
Northern Luzon have different motives compared with their comrades in Visayas
and Mindanao.”
The Cordillera
Administrative Region has its own way of settling its communities' problems.
A proof of this was
reportedly the successful negotiation that ended the uprising of the Cordillera
Peoples Liberation Army through the intervention of tribal elders years ago.
In Cagayan Valley
Region, the active participation and initiatives of the provincial and
municipal leaders have led to the surrender of NPAs in the past months.
Authorities said this
might be considered a big step for a localized approach to the insurgency
problem.
In
Cagayan province, former rebels may now get employed under the Cagayan
Employment Assistance Program of the province.
Somera said 13 former
rebels, who were among the 30 surrenderees in the first quarter of the year,
are now employed by the local government.
“With this development
in our area of operation, we are optimistic that a long-lasting peace in the
area of Cagayan Valley and Cordillera Region is within reach," Rimando
said in the statement. "The 5ID will give its all-out support to any
initiative being pursued by the local leaders in relation to the localized
peace talks with the CTGs.”
In its second-quarter
meeting last June, members of the Cordillera RDC approved the proposal for the
creation of peace initiatives in the provinces of the region to back the
national government’s peace talks with the NPA and other armed groups.
Milagros Rimando, RDC
co-chairman and National Economic Development Authority Cordillera regional
director, said the Cordillera RDC had passed a general resolution supporting
the crafting of mechanics on the conduct of localized peace talks.
Andy Ngao-I, an RDC
member who chairs the Kalinga Peace and Order Council and the Kalinga Bodong
Council, said the Kalinga Bodong or the indigenous practice of settling
disputes could also be adopted.
“We can always call out
the members of the left-leaning groups, who are ‘binodngan’ (tribe members),”
he said.
Ngao-i was one of the
CPLA members, who served as a secretariat when the government, under then
President Corazon Aquino, had the Mount Data Sipat agreement in 1987. The
agreement made the region’s armed groups lay down their arms, using the
indigenous bodong system.
Natives of Kalinga are
particular about ndigenous system of settling disputes, where a tribe leader
picked by the community represents the tribesmen in a “bodong” (peace pact)
with another tribe. The pact covers tribe members outside the province and
outside the country.
Ngao-i said the
indigenous peace practices can be used to encourage local NPAs to stop the
atrocities in their communities.
“In the indigenous
system, even if you are a leftist, whether you like it or not, you are still
under the umbrella of the bodong,” he said.
"It is important
that local peace initiatives be strengthened because national talks have bogged
down a number of times," Thomas Killip, a former Sagada town mayor and
former Presidential Adviser for Northern Luzon under the Arroyo administration,
said.
"But the real
action takes place on the ground. That is why we would like to suggest that
each community should be able to establish its own peace initiatives. Filipinos
must have a collective and constitutional right for a community to come up with
its mechanism for its survival and protection. That’s what we are
doing.” -- PNA
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