UPDATE 4 - Duterte still seeks peace talks with communist rebels

UPDATE 4 - Duterte still seeks peace talks with communist rebels

Philippine president says hopes negotiations with insurgency will continue despite gov’t calling off unilateral ceasefire

UPDATES TO ADD FATAL CLASH


By Roy Ramos and Hader Glang

ZAMBOANGA CITY, the Philippines (AA) – Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte insisted Monday that he remains interested in pursuing peace talks with communist rebels despite calling off the government's recent unilateral ceasefire after a fatal ambush.

“We are hoping that we can just talk. Maybe we did not understand each other," GMA News quoted him as saying in a short briefing at the presidential palace.

"Best way really is to talk again and maybe find out if it's reachable or beyond our reach. I hope we can proceed with the talks with the Communist Party of the Philippines [CPP]," he added.

He also reaffirmed his willingness to release political detainees – particularly those who contribute to negotiations -- including Benito Tiamzon and Wilma Austria, a couple arrested in Cebu City in 2014 who are considered top-level CPP officers.

Duterte had declared a unilateral ceasefire with the CPP and its armed and political wings in his first State of the Nation address last week, only for the military to claim that New Peoples Army (the NPA, the CPP's armed wing) rebels had ambushed a Citizens Armed Forces Geographical Unit two days later, killing a government militiaman and injuring four others.

On Friday, Duterte gave the rebels until 5 p.m. Saturday (0900GMT) to declare a ceasefire, but with no response he called it off Saturday ordering all units to be on high alert.

Hours later, exiled communist leader Jose Maria Sison said the CPP-NPA had expected to declare its own ceasefire at 8 p.m. Saturday -- three hours after failing to meet Duterte's deadline to match his truce.

On Monday, at least one NPA was killed in a clash that broke out in Surigao del Norte province in the southern island of Mindanao, according to military spokesman Brig. Gen. Restituto Padilla.

"The clashes that broke out were the first recorded fighting between government forces and communist rebels after President Rodrigo Duterte called off the unilateral ceasefire last Saturday," he was quoted by GMA as telling reporters.

Presidential Peace Adviser Jesus Dureza had earlier assured that negotiations scheduled for later this month in the Norwegian capital of Oslo would be held.

“August 20 is the resumption of the peace talks. Unless, of course, something happens along the way,” he told GMA in an interview.

He said the government will consult with the military and other sectors on the communist groups’ announcement that a ceasefire would be declared when negotiations resume, and stressed all options will be explored in terms of the government's own ceasefire alongside the communist groups’ planned truce.

"Let us see… We will study all options… Let us see what the president will decide," he said.

Late Sunday, the CPP posted a statement on the official website of the National Democratic Front, the CPP’s political wing, saying that the time-frame for a ceasefire can be determined through negotiations.

"To further support peace negotiations, the CPP is willing to issue a unilateral ceasefire declaration separately but simultaneously with the Duterte government on August 20," the CPP said.

Sison, who has been living in self-exile in the Netherlands since 1987, criticized Duterte -- his former student at a Manila university -- for being “volatile” after the president called off the government’s ceasefire.

“As far as I am concerned, the August 20 to 27 formal talks will resume in Oslo," he was quoted as saying Saturday by the Inquirer news website.

Sison also insisted that government troops on the ground had continuing operations, including in Mindanao where the fatal ambush occurred Wednesday.

“The NPA’s Southern Mindanao Command said Duterte’s ceasefire was non-existent to the AFP [Armed Forces of the Philippines] and PNP [Philippine National Police],” he said. “They are not following the ceasefire order of their own commander in chief.”

Duterte has been making peace overtures to the Front since he started to campaign for this year's presidential election.

He has sought to bring the rebels back to the negotiating table in an effort to end a Maoist insurgency -- one of the world’s longest running -- that has claimed 30,000 lives since the late 1960s.

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