UCA News
Contribute

Philippine ecumenical body for peace talks with ‘Reds’

Marcos’ newly appointed defense chief refused to resume talks with the Communist party until it stops attacking state forces

A member of the Communist Party of the Philippines' armed group, the New People's Army (NPA) with face covered marches with others toward the peace arch for a protest near Malacanang Palace in Manila on March 31, 2017

A member of the Communist Party of the Philippines' armed group, the New People's Army (NPA) with face covered marches with others toward the peace arch for a protest near Malacanang Palace in Manila on March 31, 2017. (Photo: AFP)

Published: June 15, 2023 01:02 PM GMT

Updated: June 16, 2023 11:16 AM GMT

A Philippine ecumenical group has insisted on a peaceful strategy to resolve the violent insurgency in the country as authorities declined to resume talks with the communist party.

Gilbert Teodoro Jr., the newly appointed defense chief, on June 13 said President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. would not negotiate with “terrorists” and the Communist Party of the Philippines must stop attacking state forces if it wanted to engage in peace talks.

The Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform (PEPP), an anti-violence group composed of Catholics, Protestants, and Muslims, in a statement on June 14 insisted that “as church leaders, we are consistent in our belief that an all-out-war policy will not resolve the decades-old armed conflict.”

The Many Faces of Asian Mary in Asia
and the World

It further said that violence “will be costlier in terms of the loss of lives and the budget for war material” and reminded that “an all-out violence policy” by previous administrations did not work and “brought only widespread violation of human rights.”

“The [former President Gloria Macapagal] Arroyo administration was then heavily criticized nationally and internationally for its human rights record, even at the level of the United Nations. More than a decade has passed since then and a just and enduring peace is still as elusive as ever,” it added.

Teodoro at the press conference the previous day referred to the series of attacks led by the communist party’s armed wing, New Peoples’ Army (NPA), in several towns in the archipelago.

In March, communist rebels clashed with government forces in four towns on Masbate island in Luzon province. Two months later, seven rebels were killed while two soldiers died when rebels clashed with government troops in Samar province in the Visayas region.

The communist underground groups and the  NPA, besides their sympathizers, are also referred to as the “Reds” due to their blacklisting by security forces and public authorities.

Their armed struggle, launched in 1969, grew out of the global communist movement, finding fertile soil in the Philippines' stark rich-poor divide.

At its peak in the 1980s, the group boasted about 26,000 fighters, a number the military says has now dwindled to a few thousand.

Since 1986, successive Philippine administrations have held peace talks with the communists through their Netherlands-based political leadership.

As the rebellion weakened, party leaders sought to enter a coalition government with former president Rodrigo Duterte.

Peace talks were held in hopes of ending the insurgency, but Duterte cut them off in 2017, declaring NPA a terrorist organization and accusing it of killing policemen and soldiers while negotiations were underway.

“Our police and armed forces suffered several attacks that will lead us to conclude that peace is not the main priority of this group as of the moment,” Teodoro said.

Teodoro, a veteran lawyer, said that an indicator of the communists’ willingness to pursue peace was to lay down their arms and participate in the political discourse.

“They must participate in discussions in Congress. They are represented. Communism is not a crime but a belief. It is the spread of terror that is the crime, not the belief in communism,” he said.

Teodoro stressed that “until they have laid down their arms, it is not possible to engage in any negotiation with the Communist party.”

Philippine anthropologist Wilmer Gomez, however, said poverty was the reason why people join extremist groups.

“It is the lack of basic material things that drives men to struggle for social change. The abuse by those in power, and poverty, became the tool of extremist groups to recruit. They [the poor] have no more hope but to go for radical social change… revolution,” Gomez told UCA News.

A 48-year-old former communist rebel said he was having a tough time surviving as he had three children and a wife to take care of.

“When I joined the NPA, we had an allowance given by the communist party. It was like a job fighting for the oppressed,” Miguel Toledo told UCA News.

The Catholic bishops' Commission on Social, Justice and Peace said the church’s doors were open to those who wanted to return to normal life.

“Although poverty is a legitimate cause of why people raise arms against the government, it is not the way to resolve conflicts in the Christian way. The Church is always ready to assist those who denounce arms and violence as methods of resolving conflict,” the commission’s chairman and San Carlos Bishop Gerardo Alminaza told UCA News.

comment

Share your comments

Latest News

donateads_new
newlettersign
donateads_new
Asian Dioceses
Asian Pilgrim Centers
UCA News Catholic Dioceses in Asia
UCA News Catholic Dioceses in Asia
UCA News Catholic Dioceses in Asia