Thursday, January 26, 2017

GRP-NDFP joint statement to seek Joma's delisting from US-tagged terrorists

From InterAksyon (Jan 25): GRP-NDFP joint statement to seek Joma's delisting from US-tagged terrorists



NDF political consultant Jose Maria Sison. FILE PHOTO BY RAYMUND VILLANUEVA

A joint statement to be issued at the end of the third round of formal tallks between the National Democratic Front of the Philippines and government negotiators will include a request to US government to take out the name of NDFP political consultant Jose Maria Sison from its list of terrorists.

“We have a basis (for such request), considering he is in the process, the peace talks, which negates the character of a terrorist,” government lead negotiator Silvestre Bello III said.

Bello explained the significance of the delisting: Sison needs to be able to travel outside of Europe - he has been in exile in The Netherlands - in response to President Rodrigo Duterte’s statement that he is willing to meet his former professor in any neutral Asian country.
NDFP panel member Benito Tiamzon and consultant Wilma Austria welcomed the move, saying it would help in the negotiations.

“We have long been saying that the revolutionary movement, the Communist Party of the Philippines, the NPA, most especially Prof. Sison are not terrorists,” Tiamzon said.

“It is also important that President Duterte is saying he is independent of the US and this is one concrete step showing he really is independent,” Tiamzon added.

Sison has yet to issue a statement on the development.

Another meeting Feb. 22-24

The two sides were expected to end their third round of formal talks on a successful note, with the substantive agenda having moved, and new goodwill measures included in the prospective Rome Joint Statement.

NDFP chief negotiator Fidel Agcaoili and his government counterpart, Labor Secretary Bello, said their joint statement will include the signing of the supplemental guidelines on the Joint Monitoring Committee as well as agreements on the ground rules for future negotiations on socio-economic and political and constitutional reforms.

They also agreed to hold a special meeting in The Netherlands in February 22 or 24 to discuss the GRP proposal for a bilateral ceasefire.  In that meeting, Bello will also witness NDFP’s submission of its reconstituted list of Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees-protected persons with Archbishop Wim Eijk of Utrecht for safekeeping.

“This round is turning out to be a success, despite the apparent sabotage with the killing of the activists in Negros Occidental and Surigao del Norte and the attack on the NPA (New People’s Army) encampment in North Cotabato,” Agcaoili said.

The closing ceremony of the third round is expected to be held at three o’clock local time (nine o’clock in the evening, Philippine time).

The fourth round of NDFP-GRP formal peace talks shall be held in April in Oslo, Norway.

SER negotiations

Meanwhile, Randall Echanis, the spokesperson of NDFP's socio-economic reforms (SER) Reciprocal Working Committee (RWC) and focal person fpr agrarian and rural development, said their bilateral meetings with their GRP counterparts have moved forward.

“For the first time, the GRP has submitted a comprehensive draft and we have agreed that both our drafts would be discussed with a matrix comparing both versions,” Echanis said.

Echanis also said that the Preamble and Declaration of Principles mostly based on the NDFP draft has already been agreed upon by the Reciprocal Workings Committees (RWC).

“We have identified commonalities on the Bases, Scope and Applicability provisions of our respective drafts and these are three important parts that our bilateral negotiations have disposed with,” Echanis said.

Echanis said the GRP has agreed in principle that there should be free land distribution to farmers, subject to consultations with other government agencies.

“We are for free land distribution while the GRP is for land distribution at least cost to the farmers.  We met halfway by saying the compensation should not come from the farmers but from the government,” he said.

“They said the NDFP draft’s use of the word of ‘confiscation’ is unconstitutional.  We clarified that land grabbed with use of violence and intimidation should be confiscated without compensation but we have no question with just compensation for landlords whose land was accumulated through just means,” Echanis clarified.

Echanis said the NDFP had been meeting GRP halfway in their negotiations as long as the essence and principle of agrarian reform is not compromised.

http://www.interaksyon.com/article/136530/grp-ndfp-joint-statement-to-seek-jomas-delisting-from-us-tagged-terrorists

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