Start Peace by Resuming Talks, Implementing Rights Pact – Local Rights Groups to Malacañang

The resumption of peace talks and the implementation of a human rights accord signed by the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines would help lay down the basis for peace, a human rights group in the Cordillera stated. The Cordillera Human Rights Alliance (CHRA) said that the government should pursue these if it is serious at attaining peace.

BY LYN V. RAMO
Northern Dispatch
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
Posted by Bulatlat

Vol. VIII, No. 10, April 13-19, 2008

BANGUED, Abra – The resumption of peace talks and the implementation of a human rights accord signed by the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines would help lay down the basis for peace, a human rights group in the Cordillera stated. The Cordillera Human Rights Alliance (CHRA) said that the government should pursue these if it is serious at attaining peace.

The call came from CHRA following the conclusion of the government-initiated two-day peace and security meeting that started April here.

The peace assembly that gathered over 200 government officials and representatives of local and national government agencies, people’s organizations, indigenous peoples’ groups, the academe, business and the religious sectors handed to President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo its four-page action agenda.

CHRA notes, however, that the peace assembly was held at a time when full military operations are ongoing in the boundaries of Abra, Mountain Province and Benguet.

“We find the Local Peace and Security Assembly also ironic because of the continuing implementation of Oplan Bantay Laya (Operation Freedom Watch) II – practically a state terror and war policy that has resulted in numerous human rights violations in the region like in the rest of the country,” said the members of the human rights group led by lawyer Reynaldo Cortes.

The assembly resolution and action agenda was premised on the administration’s bid to “end insurgency in 2010” or before her term ends, to fight poverty and build prosperity for Filipinos. Five workshop groups reportedly brainstormed on the said agenda.

Among others, the peace and security agenda specified granting of amnesty for the communist rebels and their mainstreaming through the social integration program; the pursuit of electoral reforms; the liberation from hunger and poverty; and the strengthening of indigenous peoples’ judicial systems in dispute resolution.

It also aimed to promote the Cordillera as the cultural tourism hub and the premier supplier of agricultural products, crafts and mineral products.

“The local peace assembly is part of the continuing program of the national government to address the insurgency and terrorism problems in the country,” a Malacañang press statement issued earlier last week read. Northern Dispatch / Posted by (Bulatlat.com)

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