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Philippines wants court to declare communist groups terrorists

This photo taken on July 30, 2017, shows guerrillas of the New People's Army (NPA) in formation in the Sierra Madre mountain range, located east of Manila, the Philippines. (Photo by AFP)

Justice officials have asked a court to formally designate the Communist Party of the Philippines and its armed wing, the New People's Army, as terrorist groups in a move that could further damage chances of a resumption of stalled peace talks.

In a petition before a Manila regional court on Wednesday, the Department of Justice cited deadly attacks and violence committed by the insurgents, including bloody internal purges of suspected military spies, in seeking the proscription of the groups behind one of Asia's longest-raging communist insurgency.

President Rodrigo Duterte resumed peace talks with the guerrillas after he rose to power in 2016. He granted concessions by appointing three left-wing activists to his Cabinet, but the cordial relations rapidly deteriorated when he protested continuing rebel assaults on troops and policemen.

Last year, he canceled Norwegian-brokered talks with the guerrillas and signed an order declaring the rebel groups as terrorist organizations in a prelude to his government's formal move on Wednesday.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gestures as he delivers a speech during a ceremony marking the anniversary of the military at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City, suburban Manila, on December 20, 2017. (Photo by AFP)

Senior assistant state prosecutor Peter Ong said the guerrillas were insincere in their talks with the government and only wanted to grab power.

"Their main purpose is to mobilize all their forces in preparation for the 'people's war' aimed at overthrowing the duly constituted authorities," according to the justice department petition, adding that the rebels wanted to impose "a totalitarian regime."

If approved by the court, the proscription could serve as a legal weapon and basis for the government in securing court clearances to put rebel leaders and fighters under surveillance and freeze their bank accounts and assets, Ong said. Companies paying the so-called "revolutionary taxes" to the rebels could be questioned even though the military said such extortion demands have been done by coercion.

The communist rebellion has raged for nearly half a century and left about 40,000 combatants and civilians dead. It also has stunted economic development, especially in the countryside, where the military says about 3,700 Maoist insurgents are still waging a guerrilla war.

(Source: AP)


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