NDFP-EV slams
Aquino regime's refusal of reciprocal ceasefire: “We may be enemies of
the state, but we are the friends of the people”
By NDF-Eastern Visayas
November 28, 2013
The National Democratic
Front of the Philippines in Eastern Visayas denounces the Aquino
government as utterly despicable for refusing to reciprocate the
revolutionary movement's ceasefire in areas affected by Typhoon
Yolanda (international name: Haiyan).
The revolutionary movement
in the region has declared a unilateral ceasefire up to mid-January
2014. The Aquino government's regional military commander, Maj. Gen.
Jet Velarmino, is particularly reprehensible for saying, "We did not
make a declaration of ceasefire even after the typhoon. They are
enemies of the state."
We may be enemies of the
state, but we are the friends of the people, their interests come
first. On the other hand, what else can we call the Aquino government
and its military, except as enemies of the people for refusing a
ceasefire that would facilitate aid to the Typhoon Yolanda victims?
The Aquino government troops
showed no compunction in continuing their offensives against the New
People's Army even while the region was still reeling from the
typhoon's aftermath. Gen. Velarmino's troops from the 8th Infantry
Division are still on combat operations under Oplan Bayanihan in the
central parts of Samar island. Aside from search and destroy missions,
they are also harassing villagers suspected of supporting the NPA. It
goes to show the Aquino government and its military have no concern
for the plight of the people.
Tacloban City and other
calamity areas are virtual garrisons. Right after the typhoon, the
Aquino government sent armored cars and armed troops to Tacloban as a
“show of force” to the hungry and desperate people, who were not
receiving any government aid and commandeering whatever they needed to
survive. Today there are several military checkpoints at the entrances
and exits to the city, and the people are subjected to curfews, and
accosted and treated like criminals. Meanwhile, so-called bunkhouses
have been hastily constructed where homeless families are to be herded
like cattle into cramped confines. This scenario is replicated in
other areas that are suffering from the typhoon's aftermath. All these
show the Aquino government regards the people with contempt, showing
little concern over their sufferings, and enforcing their subservience
to the armed might of the state.
Is the Aquino government
refusing a reciprocal ceasefire because it is not serious about
long-term reconstruction in Eastern Visayas?
At present, the Aquino
government is making a mockery of the relief and rehabilitation in
region. The typhoon victims live by the day, hoping they will have
something to eat the next day, vulnerable to starvation and disease.
There is also no long-term plan for the urban and rural poor as well
as the middle-class who lost their homes and livelihoods, while the
vultures of corruption have started circling. Without any
socio-economic reforms, without any public consultation and
transparent governance, the big bureaucrats and big businesses will
surely take advantage of the people's plight in order to profit from
corruption in the massive reconstruction effort needed. As an added
insult to the victims of Typhoon Yolanda, the US and Philippine
governments are rushing towards an agreement justifying the basing of
US military troops in the country in violation of national
sovereignty. It seems the reason why there is no ceasefire for
Aquino's troops is that they are there to ensure that it will be
business as usual in keeping the people in their state of exploitation
and oppression.
The people will hold the
Aquino regime to account for refusing a reciprocal ceasefire to
facilitate aid to the typhoon victims. The victims of Typhoon Yolanda
and the rest of the people will surely rise from their grief to demand
for a reconstruction favoring the people, as well as socio-economic
reforms for the long term in the region and other calamity areas.
If the Aquino government
cannot bring itself to call even a limited ceasefire in the name of
humanity, how much more a just and lasting peace?