Philippine
communist rebels end ceasefire
MANILA, Feb 1, 2017 (AFP) - Philippine Maoist rebels said Wednesday they would end a five-month ceasefire, accusing President Rodrigo Duterte's government of treachery and human rights abuses.
MANILA, Feb 1, 2017 (AFP) - Philippine Maoist rebels said Wednesday they would end a five-month ceasefire, accusing President Rodrigo Duterte's government of treachery and human rights abuses.
The move comes after a third round of peace talks aimed at
ending decades of bloodshed wrapped up in Italy last week with no deal on a
permanent cessation of fighting.
The Communist Party of the Philippines said it would continue to
support the peace negotiations, but ordered its 4,000 fighters to resume
"military campaigns and tactical offensives" against government
forces from February 11.
"The (government) has treacherously taken advantage of the
(rebels') unilateral declaration of ceasefire to encroach on the territory of
the people's democratic movement," the rebels said in a statement.
Soldiers and police had used the truce as a licence to
"engage in hostile actions" including "human rights
violations" in rebel-influenced rural villages.
Past experience had showed "it is possible to negotiate
while fighting until the substantive agreements are forged to address the roots
of the armed conflict".
The Duterte government was "dismayed" by the
announcement, Jesus Dureza, the presidential adviser to the peace talks, said
in a statement.
But Dureza said he would urge Duterte to abide by the
government's own ceasefire.
A presidential spokesman said the peace talks, which are due to
resume in Oslo on April 2, would go ahead.
The communists have been waging an insurgency since 1968 that
the military says has claimed 30,000 lives, to overthrow a capitalist system
that has created one of Asia's biggest rich-poor divides.
Duterte, a self-styled socialist who was swept to power in elections
last year, restarted peace talks that had been on and off for 30 years.
The two sides separately declared ceasefires as negotiators
began talks in Norway in August, and the informal arrangement largely held as
they continued discussions on the outskirts of Rome last week.
But the rebels rejected government overtures to sign a formal
ceasefire and peace settlement this year, warning such a pact was unlikely to
be achieved before 2019.
The rebels also criticised Duterte's failure to grant amnesty
and free nearly 400 jailed guerrillas. The government released 18 jailed rebel
leaders at the start of the talks last year.
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