Philippine President Duterte warns rebels ahead of new round of talks

Rodrigo Duterte threatened to unleash new attack aircraft and the "full power of the state" against communist rebels if a new round of peace talks fails.
Phillipine president Rodrigo Duterte (File Photo | AP)
Phillipine president Rodrigo Duterte (File Photo | AP)

MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte threatened today to unleash new attack aircraft and the "full power of the state" against communist rebels if a new round of peace talks fails, and insisted they accept new conditions including a halt to extortion and to territorial claims.

Government and rebel negotiators have flown to the Netherlands for a resumption of the talks, which collapsed in February after Duterte angrily protested the killings of government troops in renewed attacks by the New People's Army rebels.

The formal opening ceremony of the Norwegian-brokered talks, which the government announced would take place yesterday, was delayed by a day. "We're facing the NPAs, we're having talks in the Netherlands, they have not made any progress because I have some conditions to impose before we go back," Duterte said in a speech at the presidential palace in Manila.

He accused the guerrillas of undermining the talks and said the 48-year conflict, one of Asia's longest-running rebellions, may continue if the rebels don't accept his conditions. Government chief negotiator Silvestre Bello III acknowledged the difficulty of the talks in a speech at the ceremony marking the resumption of talks.

He welcomed the rebels' openness to a possible joint cease-fire. "Our discussion in the following days may prove to be difficult and exacting given the diversity of the positions taken by the parties on the issues at hand," he said in his speech, a copy of which was issued by the presidential palace in Manila.

Duterte told reporters yesterday that he had asked Bello and his adviser on the talks, Jesus Dureza, to stick to four new conditions he has laid down, including the forging of a joint cease-fire and an end to extortion by the rebels and their claims to rural territories. All military, police and civilians held by the rebels should also be freed, he said.

"Without these, there will be no peace talks," Duterte said yesterday. There was no immediate rebel reaction to Duterte's new conditions. In the past, they have rejected government conditions they deemed were a surrender of the advances they say they have made in their rural-based uprising.

Duterte said today that he would use newly acquired attack aircraft and other weapons against the guerrillas if the talks go nowhere. "I'll really use those against the enemies of the government," he said. "I will not hesitate to use the full power of the state."

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