Duterte on Thursday, July 28, threatened to withdraw a
ceasefire order he gave three days ago after suspected communist rebels killed
a government militiaman and wounded four others in an attack. (AP Photo/Bullit
Marquez, File)
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philippine President Rodrigo
Duterte on Thursday threatened to withdraw a ceasefire order he gave three days
ago after suspected communist rebels killed a government militiaman and wounded
four others in an attack.
After learning about the New People's Army rebel attack,
Duterte told army troops he called and asked a left-wing lawmaker to tell the
guerrillas they have up to Friday to tell him if they wanted to have a truce,
otherwise, both sides can return to fighting.
Duterte, who has made friendly overtures to the Maoist
guerrillas, warned the rebels if one more soldier or militiaman is killed,
"let's just fight."
"I was talking to the congressman and asked, 'What is
this? Are we into this truce or are we not?'" Duterte told army troops
during a visit to their camp in Quezon province southeast of Manila. "I
told them give me an answer by tonight because if there will be none by
tomorrow, I will remove the (truce) and we'll go back to fighting."
The tough-talking president said he demanded an explanation
from the communists about the attack and asked them to punish the rebels behind
the assault like what the military does to erring soldiers. "Otherwise, we
didn't talk about anything, that's my deal," he said.
Duterte declared a unilateral cease-fire with the rebels
effective Monday in a bid to foster the resumption of peace talks and end a
decades-old Marxist insurgency that he said "is getting bloodier by the
day." The guerrilla leaders immediately welcomed the move and said they
were considering responding soon and would likely declare their own cease-fire.
The militiamen were withdrawn from a security mission
following the president's truce declaration and were traveling back to their
patrol base Wednesday when they came under rebel attack in southern Kapalong
town in Davao del Norte province, military spokesman Col. Edgard Arevalo said.
Despite the hostile rebel action, the military said it would
enforce the truce.
"If you do not honor and you kill a single soldier or a
Cafgu, who is also a soldier of the republic, I said let's forget this and
let's just fight," Duterte said, referring to the military's militia unit.
Duterte's angry reaction reflects his openness to shift from
friendly overtures he has so far made to the rebels, who have been waging one
of Asia's longest communist insurgencies.
The decades-long communist insurgency has left about 150,000
combatants and civilians dead since it broke out in the late 1960s. It also has
stunted economic development, especially in the countryside, where the Maoist
insurgents are active.
Under Duterte's predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, peace
negotiations with the communists that were brokered by Norway stalled over the
government's rejection of a rebel demand for the release of captured
insurgents. But Duterte, who describes himself as a socialist, had given
concessions to the rebels, naming left-wing activists to two Cabinet posts and
moving to resume peace talks with them from Aug. 20 to 27 in the Norwegian
capital of Oslo.
While he said he would pursue talks with communist and
Muslim rebels, Duterte told the army troops that Abu Sayyaf extremists would
have to be destroyed.
The small but brutal group has been blacklisted by the
United States and the Philippines as a terrorist organization for bombings,
ransom kidnappings and beheadings. Duterte earlier said he understood the
poverty and neglect that drove the militants to take up arms and he appealed to
them to end kidnappings.
But he called the militants outlaws who had no ideology.
"The Abu Sayyaf is not included, I will not talk with
criminals," Duterte said. "We have to destroy them, we have no other
choice."
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