President
Rodrigo Duterte has given instructions to Labor Secretary and government chief
peace negotiator Silvestre ‘Bebot’ Bello III and panel member Angela
Librado-Trinidad to produce a signed bilateral ceasefire agreement before he
will order a substantial release of detained communist rebels.
“Produce to me a signed
bilateral ceasefire agreement and I will release them within 48 hours.
You can take my word for it,” Bello quoted the president as saying.
The president later
told Malacanang Palace employees that the government has already conceded far
enough to the National Democratic Front.
But he also promised to
release a number of elderly and sick detained rebels before Christmas Day.
“The president told us
that once he receives even just a facsimile copy of the signed agreement, he
will immediately order the release of communist rebels,” Bello likewise said.
Bello and Librado
sought instructions from Malacanang after the president met with top rebel
leaders Benito and William Tiamzon in Davao City on Friday evening.
In that meeting, the
president said he would keep his campaign promise to release detained communist
rebels.
The president, however,
gave his latest instructions during the break of the cabinet meeting at the
Palace Monday evening.
The government panel
holding peace talks with the NDF has submitted a list of 200 prisoners who are
eligible for release under the new guidelines of the Presidential Committee on
Bail, Recognizance and Parole (PCBREP).
Twenty-five (25) of
them are elderly, sick and women.
The NDF claimed 434
rebels are still being held in different detentions all over the country.
Four rebels convicted
for murder and kidnapping were already given presidential pardon as announced
by the Secretary Bello Friday last week.
They were identified as
Martin Villanueva, Bonifacio Suyon, Dindo Absalon and Rico Bodina. They
have served sentence ranging from 18 to 26 years. All are farmers.
Ceasefire
Although both the government and the NDF have declared their own
unilateral ceasefires, the two camps have been complaining of reports of
violations from the field.
But Bello said until both panels agree to a set of guidelines,
“there are technically no violations.”
The labor secretary
said it is to the best interest of combatants from both sides and especially
the civilians caught in the middle of the armed conflict that a “formal
ceasefire is in place so that we can monitor any claims of violations.”
“Remember, one life
saved is one more happy family,” the government chief negotiator said.
During the formal
opening round of the peace negotiations, both the GRP and NDF panels agreed to
submit drafts on bilateral ceasefire.
But the NDF later said
the ceasefire is tied to the release of ‘political prisoners’.
President Duterte
earlier ordered the release of 21 rebel leaders who now are acting as
consultants of the NDF panel holding peace talks with the government.
The president made a
campaign promise to reopen peace negotiations with the NDF, which is
representing the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and its armed wing
the New People’s Army (NPA).
The Philippine
government and the NDF will resume formal peace talks in January, possibly in
Rome, Italy.
“The weather is a bit
better in Rome than in Oslo, Norway,” Bello cited the reason for the change of
talks’ venue.
The first two rounds of
formal peace negotiations with the NDF under the Duterte administration were
held in Norway whose government is facilitating the talks to put an end to
nearly 50 years of armed rebellion in the Philippines.
The guerrilla war being
waged by the CPP-NPA-NDF is now Asia’s longest running active insurgency
movement. (pr/posted by Becky D. de Asis - The Redline News)
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