Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III said
they will ask government prosecutors to file and respond to necessary motions
and manifestations for the speedy release of detained communist leaders after
the Supreme Court said the proper procedures for their releases are within the
ambit of the Regional Trial Courts handling their cases.
Bello said he is confident that detained
consultants of the National Democratic Front (NDF) will be released in time for
the formal resumption of the peace negotiations on August 20 in Oslo,
Norway.
The Labor secretary also welcomed the
Supreme Court decision as it sets into motion the urgency of the granting of
the provisional release of the NDF consultants.
Reacting to the Supreme Court ruling on
the motion for intervention filed by Solicitor General Jose Calida, Bello said,
“the Supreme Court did not dismiss the petition to grant bail or release the
NDF consultants. It merely denied the motion for intervention of the Solicitor
General on the grounds of jurisdiction and technicality.”
Bello added that the Supreme Court
“underscored the immediacy of the issue at hand and urged the Regional Trial
Courts, which have jurisdictions over their cases, to act with dispatch
petitions that would come their way with regards to the detained NDF
consultants so as the peace process could be expedited.”
The Office of the Solicitor General on
July 22 filed before the Supreme Court a petition for intervention to grant bail
for the temporary liberty of communist rebels who were named consultants by the
NDF.
The Philippine government and the NDF
have agreed to reopen peace negotiations following the election victory of
President Rodrigo Duterte.
The GPH-NDF peace talks have been
suspended since 2012 after both panels cannot agree on several issues among
them the release of detained communist leaders and interpretation of the Joint
Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees and The Hague Joint Declaration.
Bello, who heads the recently
reconstituted government panel (GPH) for the peace talks with the communists,
said the decision to agree on the release of the NDF consultants is “an express
manifestation of President Rodrigo Duterte’s earlier promises to free all political
prisoners in the country.”
“This has nothing to do with any
precondition to the resumption for the peace negotiations. The commitment of
the President was made during the campaign period when he promised to re-open
talks with the NDF and release detained communists,” Bello said.
“We will cooperate and collaborate with
the defense counsels of the detained NDF consultants and will not oppose
petitions for bail or their temporary release for them to join the peace
negotiations,” Bello said.
“We should understand that these
detained leaders have been charged with common crimes and we have legal
proceedings to observe before they can be released,” Bello explained.
President Duterte earlier instructed the
government panel to expedite the release of NDF consultants who are likely to
join their exiled colleagues in the peace talks either as panel members or
members of the reciprocal working committees that are to be constituted during
the formal resumption in Oslo.
The Royal Government of Norway is
brokering the peace talks as a third party facilitator. ### (posted by Becky D. de Asis/The Redline News)
No comments:
Post a Comment