By Sammy F. Martin | Philippines News Agency
THE government is ready to sign other agreements with the National Democratic Front (NDF), while discussion on contents and provisions of major substantive agenda is ongoing, when peace talks resume in Rome this week.
Government chief peace negotiator with the NDF Silvestre H. Bello III said the government is all set to sign a supplemental agreement on the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect of Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law, which will include an expanded role of the Joint Monitoring Committee.
“We are prepared to sign other agreements while we are discussing contents and provisions of the major substantive agenda,” Bello said in a statement.
“And we are challenging the NDF to formalize the unilateral cease-fire with a bilateral cease-fire agreement to give our communities and combatants a more secure environment for the peace process,” Bello added.
The third round of talks will start on January 19 and ends on January 25.
Bello is confident that the Rome talks will result in major breakthroughs.
Bello also said the panel will submit on Monday to President Duterte the draft documents that will be tabled for discussion in Rome.
“We are all set and ready to engage the NDF in the discussion of all substantive agenda, including supplemental agreements needed to proceed and arrive at a peaceful negotiated political settlement, to end the armed conflict in the country,” Bello added.
The government panel will pay a courtesy call on the President in Malacañang tonight.
Among the documents to be submitted to the President are draft agreements and principles for the Comprehensive Agreement on Socioeconomic Reforms (Caser), Comprehensive Agreement on Political and Constitutional Reforms, and Comprehensive Agreement on End of Hostilities and Disposition of Forces.
“We are doing this in the spirit of true reconciliation and genuine quest for just and lasting peace,” he explained.
The main group of government delegation leaves for Rome on Tuesday.
Peace negotiations with the NDF were resumed in August 2016, after more than five years of impasse following the election of Duterte.
In the August round when the negotiations were reopened, both panels agreed to reaffirm all previous signed agreements and reconstitution of the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees and release of NDF leaders and members.
In the second round also in Oslo, Norway, negotiators exchanged outlines and agreed to accelerate the negotiations.
The government is confident it can strike a peace deal with the communist-led NDF, which counts among its member organization the Communist Party of the Philippines and the New People’s Army.