From the Website of CBCP
links: http://www.cbcpnews.com/cbcpnews/?p=33174
Like all peace loving
Filipinos, we rejoice with our countrymen as we mark a milestone in the
peace process with the signing of the peace agreement between the
Philippine Government and the MILF. The journey of a thousand miles
begins with a single step. We pray that this first courageous
breakthrough will be followed by more steps leading to true and lasting
peace in Mindanao.
I appeal to the Philippine government panel to continue the process of wide spread consultation and an honest, open and trusting dialogue with other communities in Mindanao especially those who feel marginalized and ignored like the MNLF. It is so important for peace to be sustainable that it be inclusive and all embracing. The strength of the signing agreement lies in its willingness to reach out to everyone including those who are antagonistic to it. A continuing dialogue will strengthen our peace even more.
It is very urgent that economic activity in Mindanao be enhanced immediately. There ca be no peace without human development. Development and the promotion of human progress is another name for peace. The promotion of total human development is long delayed. It cannot wait further. The people of Mindanao have been suffering for decades.
May we all be ready to become channels of peace! Peacemakers are children of God.
+Socrates B Villegas
Archbishop of Lingayen Dagupan
CBCP President
QUEZON City—March 30, 2014—In the interest of peace, groups made
up of prominent Church leaders and human rights watchers, called on the
Aquino administration to ditch its “military approach” and resume peace
talks with the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army-
National Democratic Front of the Philippines (CPP-NPA-NDFP).
CBCP Statement on the Signing of Peace Agreement
I appeal to the Philippine government panel to continue the process of wide spread consultation and an honest, open and trusting dialogue with other communities in Mindanao especially those who feel marginalized and ignored like the MNLF. It is so important for peace to be sustainable that it be inclusive and all embracing. The strength of the signing agreement lies in its willingness to reach out to everyone including those who are antagonistic to it. A continuing dialogue will strengthen our peace even more.
It is very urgent that economic activity in Mindanao be enhanced immediately. There ca be no peace without human development. Development and the promotion of human progress is another name for peace. The promotion of total human development is long delayed. It cannot wait further. The people of Mindanao have been suffering for decades.
May we all be ready to become channels of peace! Peacemakers are children of God.
+Socrates B Villegas
Archbishop of Lingayen Dagupan
CBCP President
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Resume talks with reds now, PNoy told
(L-R)
Rey Claro Casambre, (Philippine Peace Center), Rev. Rex Reyes Jr.
(National Council of Churches in the Philippines), Caloocan Bishop
Emeritus Deogracias Iñiguez (Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform),
Nardy Sabino (Promotion of Church People’s Response), Sr. Maureen
Catabian, RGS (Pilgrims for Peace, and Benjo Basas (Sulong CARHRIHL)
emphasize the urgency of resuming peace talks with the (CPP-NPA-NDFP).
(Photo credit: Raymond A. Sebastián)
Band-aid solution
In a press briefing at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani
(Heroes’ Monument) in Quezon Avenue Friday, the peace groups stressed
that a “military approach” to the Marx-inspired insurgency will at best
be a “band-aid” solution to the problem if the conditions that create
rebels out of people are still in place.
This refers to the arrest on March 22 of two alleged top
Communist party chiefs Benito and Wilma Tiamzon, with five others in
Cebu, bringing back to the limelight the four decades-long armed
conflict between the Philippine government and the Maoist rebels, and
the issues that have stalled the peace talks for years.
While both parties refuse to sit down and talk their
differences over, violations of human rights are increasing and
intensifying, with poverty and hunger remaining everyday realities which
haunt the ‘poorest of all’, Pilgrims for Peace co-chair Fr. Rex Reyes,
Jr said..
He said, this reality must make resuming peace negotiations a priority for both parties.
Roots of the conflict
“Genuine peace in the country can only be achieved by
addressing the roots of the armed conflict, by replacing the ruling
socio-economic and political system with a genuinely and democratic
one,” Philippine Peace Center head Rey Claro Casambre stressed.
Casambre added that given the poverty, injustice, and
inequality plaguing many, “the people will continue to fight for a
better Philippine society in all arenas and through all possible means”
when their own government is not doing it for them.
He also downplayed the government’s recent success on
the “Moro question”, calling many high-ranking officials “deluded”, not
reading the Muslim rebels’ real message.
Casambre noted that Moro International Liberation Front
(MILF) leaders “speak with cautious and guarded optimism, subtly warning
that the completion of the normalization process—the final
demobilization of the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces—is contingent on
enjoying in reality and not just on paper their right to
self-determination”.
Impasse, not terminated
Fr. Reyes, Jr. also pointed out, the peace talks are
just at an “impasse but not terminated”, since the negotiating panels of
the Philippine government and the rebels have not been dissolved.
The peace talks between the government and the Reds have
been stalled over issues on the compliance with or violation of
bilateral agreements entered into by both parties, especially The Hague
Joint Declaration, the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees
(JASIG), and the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights
and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL).
Fr. Reyes expressed the hope that despite differences,
both parties will start tackling the pending second substantive agenda
on socio-economic reforms.
“We want peace in our land. We want harmony among our
people. We want progress for our country. These will come to pass only
when we start working together, feeding on justice and righteousness,”
the priest added. (Raymond A. Sebastián)
CBCP Website
Article links:
http://www.cbcpnews.com/cbcpnews/?p=33174
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