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Joma: Duterte causing confusion in talks

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Joma: Duterte causing confusion in talks
Thousands of activist march during the National Protest day in Manila, September 21,2017.Protester marked the 45th anniversary of the declaration of Martial Law by the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos and called for a stop to alleged extra-judicial killings that have been linked to the government's war on criminality and drugs, and called on current president Rodrigo Duterte to lift Martial Law enforced in the southern Philippine region of Mindanao.(Czar Dancel)

Joma: Duterte causing confusion in talks
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:50 AM June 20, 2018
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1002386/joma-duterte-causing-confusion-in-talks

Exiled communist leader Jose Maria “Joma” Sison opposed a proposal to seek a review by Congress of draft agreements between rebels and the government as a condition for formal talks to start, saying this was one of President Rodrigo Duterte’s tactics to sabotage the talks.

Sison, in an online interview, said “confusing the steps” could be the President’s “way of paralyzing and killing the peace negotiations.”

Sison made the remark after Silvestre Bello III, the government’s chief negotiator, was quoted as saying the government would not sign the interim peace agreement with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) without consulting lawmakers and other stakeholders first.

Bello was quoted as saying this was one of the reasons the President canceled the resumption of talks originally set for June 28 in Oslo, Norway.

Norway hosts the talks and plays the role of third-party facilitator, which presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said need not be a foreign country.

Roque, at a press conference in Cotabato City, sought to correct what he said were erroneous reports that quoted him as saying there was no need for a third party in talks with the NDFP anymore and that Norway was being removed from that role.

The report that quoted him saying that was a “fabrication,” Roque said.

“The point of the President was he could not understand why the talks needed to be held in other countries,” Roque said.

“Any party who wants to help and who’s been involved in the process can help,” he added. —Reports from Delfin T. Mallari Jr. and Allan Nawal

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