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Government to Reds: Talk first, review terror tag later

- Efren Danao -
Foreign Affairs Secretary Blas Ople said yesterday communist rebels must resume peace talks before the government reviews their removal from a list of international terrorists.

"This interdiction by the international community will not be reviewed unless the (National Democratic Front) shows good faith in the (peace) negotiations and returns to the peace talks, and there is substantial progress made in the negotiations," he said.

Ople said only under these conditions would the government rethink the terrorist tag on exiled communist leader Jose Ma. Sison, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), and the New People’s Army (NPA).

"There is a stalemate and the (communist rebels) don’t want to negotiate, the onus will be on them," he said.

Sison, CPP and the NPA deserve the "terrorist" tag because communist rebels killed numerous individuals while peace talks were going on, and that they had extorted so-called "revolutionary taxes" from the people, Ople added.

Upon the government’s representations, the United States, European Union, Australia, and Canada have declared as "terrorists" Sison, the CPP and the NPA.

But, in Utrecht, Sison refuted the government’s claims and said the communists want to resume peace talks.

"The (NDF) wants to resume the peace negotiations with the government of the Philippines," Sison said in a statement.

According to Sison, the government demanded that the communists "bow to the so-called peace agreement one-sidedly prepared by the (government) and surrender to the (government) in six months time or face joint combat operations from the US and (Manila)".

The communists charge that it was Manila that abruptly broke off talks.

"The scheme of the US and puppet regime (in Manila) is to insult and provoke the NDFP with the demand for surrender and misrepresent the refusal to surrender as a refusal to engage in peace negotiations in order to justify an all-out war and pave the way for the joint US-(Manila) military campaigns against the revolutionary forces," Sison said.
Latest clashes
In Agusan del Sur, government troops killed an undetermined number of NPA rebels after a 30-minute firefight Thursday night.

No casualty was reported on the government side.

Led by 2nd Lt. Leonardo Intab, soldiers from the Army’s 36th Infantry Battalion encountered 30 NPA rebels while on patrol in Sitio Burgos, Barangay Culiram in Talocogon town.

A military report said the rebels fled to the hinterlands to elude pursuing troops and brought with them their wounded comrades.

After inspecting the scene of fighting, troops discovered an NPA camp, which can accommodate between 100 and 150 guerrillas at a given time.

The soldiers found in the camp medical equipment, like dextrose bottles, as well as three Armalite rifles, live ammunition and subversive documents.

Last Feb. 16, some 100 NPA guerrillas raided and took 10 high-powered firearms from an Army detachment in Barangay Zamora, which is some 120 kilometers southeast of Culiram.

In Masbate City, NPA guerrillas killed a barangay chairman and wounded a militiaman Thursday after attacking a civic center in Barangay Bayombon.

Masbate police commander Superintendent Romeo Mapalo said the rebels had earlier shot dead a civilian, who was identified as Gerardo Danao, 34.

Forty minutes later, another group of NPA guerrillas raided a police outpost under Senior Police Officer 1 Emilio Almosara Deano, which was guarding the civic center, he added.

During the five-minute firefight, the rebels wounded Roldan Montes, a member of the Civilian Volunteers Organization.

The rebels fled towards Masbate’s boundary with Baleno and Aroroy towns. – With Ben Serrano, Celso Amo, Katherine Adraneda, Pia Lee-Brago, Benjie Villa

BALENO AND AROROY

BARANGAY BAYOMBON

BARANGAY CULIRAM

BARANGAY ZAMORA

BENJIE VILLA

GOVERNMENT

NPA

PEACE

REBELS

SISON

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