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Saturday, September 17, 2016

AN INVITATION TO JOIN THE POPULAR MOVE TO SUPPORT THE ON-GOING PEACE NEGOTIATION BETWEEN GRP AND THE NDFP

AN INVITATION TO JOIN THE POPULAR MOVE TO SUPPORT THE ON-GOING PEACE NEGOTIATION BETWEEN GRP AND THE NDFP

Posted by Belarmino Dabalos Saguing
Rome, Italy 17 September 2016 




We are addressing this invitation to all our compatriots OFWs and all Filipinos living and working in foreign countries and to the people of our host countries, that they may understand how important to our common benefits the success of the peace negotiations.
First and foremost, we would want to let it be known why there are armed strifes in the Philippines, its root causes, how it affects every one of us and its impact to the world’s community of nations.
Thirty-three years ago the late Jose W. Diokno*, eminent senator, human rights defender and quintessential nationalist, identified four “basic problems” of Philippine society, thus:
1. Widespread deep poverty among our people and inequality in wealth, privilege, and power;
2.  Although supposedly independent, we are not really sovereign. With their military bases, the US government and military were allowed to participate in “internal security activities” and to intervene in our internal affairs.  The World Bank-IMF tandem — not the people’s elected representatives — made economic policy, to the detriment of the Filipino people.
3. “We (were) a state, but not yet a nation,” because divisions persisted among language or ethnic groups; and
4. Lack of real freedom, especially for the poor. The formal freedoms “written on the books,” which had been set aside under martial law, weren’t yet restored.
And what caused these basic problems? Not martial law, Diokno emphasized.* “The cause… has always been imperialism – first Spanish imperialism (colonialism), and then, US imperialism.”
 “Martial law was simply the product of imperialism,” he explained. On his own Marcos could not have declared martial law, he said, “unless he had had — and he did have — the support of the US government.”
Thus, Diokno concluded: “The ultimate fight is to regain our sovereignty.”  To solve these basic problems, he urged the Filipino people to organize and mobilize themselves on the basis of common interests and common aspirations. “That is the only practical remedy,” he stressed, assuring that once that is done “we can break US domination.”
That proposal was contained in the NDFP comprehensive peace agenda given to the government panel in December 1986. (By that time Diokno was too ill to carry on with his tasks; Ramon V. Mitra thus took over as government chief negotiator, succeeded by Teofisto Guingona Jr.)  After negotiations were cut short by the Mendiola massacre of peasants rallying for agrarian reform in January 1987, the NDFP raised the proposal three more times in a bid to restart the negotiations with the Cory government.
That proposal was contained in the NDFP comprehensive peace agenda given to the government panel in December 1986. (By that time Diokno was too ill to carry on with his tasks; Ramon V. Mitra thus took over as government chief negotiator, succeeded by Teofisto Guingona Jr.)  After negotiations were cut short by the Mendiola massacre of peasants rallying for agrarian reform in January 1987, the NDFP raised the proposal three more times in a bid to restart the negotiations with the Cory government.
We commend the Negotiating Panels of the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) for holding a successful round of formal peace talks in Oslo, Norway last 22 to 26 August 2016, after an impasse since 2011. We also express our appreciation to the Royal Norwegian Government for so ably and graciously serving as Third-party Facilitator.  If the resulting six agreements are an indication of more successful rounds of principled negotiations in the coming months to address the roots of the armed conflict in our country, the promise of a just and lasting peace may be achievable in our lifetime  **

Peace is more than just the absence of armed strife. It also mean the freedom to pursue progressive steps to improve the well being of the nation. Peace in our country will bring progress as it removes the stumbling blocks that hinders the implementation of measures that will be concentrated on the well-being of the people that heretofore was being funneled to destruction of livelihood detrimental to the welfare and security of the citizens. 

** http://nccphilippines.org/2016/09/celebrating-peace-constituency-deepening-advocacy-grp-ndpf-peace-talks/ 
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