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Anniversary Issue
Pilgrims for Peace Bulletin
Pilgrimage for Peace: Our Continuing
Task Amidst Global and National Crisis
We, peace advocates who shared the avowed goals
of the GRP and NDFP - the resolution of the armed conflict and the
attainment of a just and lasting peace - came to be known as Pilgrims
for Peace from a meeting of convenors on September 13, 2002. We had
our roots from the August 30 forum last year wherein Manila-based
peace advocates gathered around the theme “Peace Talks: Looking Back,
Pushing Forward.”
A year ago, our common pursuit of genuine peace,
a lasting peace based on freedom, democracy and social justice, guided
us in crafting the statement “Resume Formal Peace Talks Now!” Within
weeks, this unity statement was widely disseminated in all the major
provinces throughout the country. A Philippine Star columnist noted,
“Signatories of the Pilgrims for Peace statement teem like the sands
of the sea. They represent all sectors of civil society and cannot
just be ignored by the government.”
Interestingly, when Vice-Pres. Teofisto Guingona
added his name to our statement, he took time to actually write “Not
only with the NDF, also with the MILF.” Similar views from other
signatories thus heightened our consciousness to actively contribute
in addressing the issues, problems and aspirations of the people in
Mindanao at the national level.
Today, as we celebrate our first anniversary and
commemorate the eleventh year of The Hague Joint Declaration of 1992,
may our sense of solidarity as peacemakers be strengthened in this
timely conference on “Just and Lasting Peace: A Continuing Challenge
Amidst Global and National Crisis.”
We faithfully encouraged the GRP, NDFP and MILF
to resume formal peace talks on the basis of previous bilateral
agreements that have proven to be workable and mutually acceptable.
While we began with urgent appeals to resume the peace negotiations,
we also marvel at the fact that we have addressed the most burning
issues and threats to peace in the local and global context.
From January to April 2003, in the face of
looming and actual attacks on Iraq, we have seen that Pilgrims for
Peace convenors also led the multitude in a series of inter-faith
prayer rallies, candle-lighting, protest marches and various forms of
demonstrations to stop the US-led aggression in the Middle East.
In February 2003, the devastating impact of
all-out war in Pikit, North Cotabato moved us to join the
fact-finding, relief and medical mission organized by our partners in
the Moro-Christian People’s Alliance (MCPA) and KARAPATAN. Moreover,
Pilgrims for Peace co-sponsored the Muslim-Christian Conference themed
“Building Bridges, Healing the Wounds of the Crusades, Promoting a
Just and Lasting Peace in the ‘Second Front’ of the War on Terrorism”
with the MCPA and Free Basilan 73 Committee, May 20-22, 2003 in
Zamboanga City.
In March 2003, the reported failure of GRP-NDFP
back–channel talks which were suppsed to pave the way for the
reopening of formal peace talks prodded us to invite the GRP, through
Sec. Eduardo Ermita, Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process, to
enlighten the public regarding the status and prospects of the peace
talks. In a dialogue with Norwegian State Secretary Vidar Helgesen in
June, Pilgrims for Peace representatives Bishop Julio Labayen, Bishop
Gabriel Garol, and Bishop Alan Sarte of the Ecumenical Bishops Forum (EBF)
encouraged continuing support of the Norwegian government for the
resumption of GRP-NDFP peace talks. Through the statements and
resource materials issued, peace dialogues, conferences, public fora
and lobbying efforts initiated by the organizations and individual
members of Pilgrims for Peace, we can say that much has been done in
the past year. But knowing that so much more needs to be done, we
must all continue in the pilgrimage for a just and lasting peace. In
the face of increasing militarism, threats and on-going acts of
aggression against poor nations, arbitrary terrorist listing, human
rights abuses and other factors affecting the peace process, may we
have the strength and courage to further advance our pilgrimage for a
lasting peace based on freedom, democracy and social justice!
HERE’S THE SCORE
by: Teodoro C. Benigno
(an excerpt from THE PHILLIPINE STAR, October 21, 2002)
A Nation in Fear
… The US government’s decision to designate the
CPP-NPA (Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army) as a
“foreign terrorist organization” was to the mind of the many
Filipinos, gross interference in the Philippines internal affairs.
That decision can perhaps can be laughed off if the US had no fingers
stuck in the Philippines security pie. The fact is elite American
combat troops are in the Philippines, with their presence increasing
to thousands in the near future. At any moment they decide they can
slit the throats individually and collectively of the CPP-NPA. And
because Malacañang and the Armed Forces of the Philippines “welcomed”
Washington’s decision to designate them as terrorists, a terrible
bloodbath can ensue…
A new activist organization denominated “Pilgrims
for Peace” (PFP) urges that the government “resumes formal peace talks
now!” with the CPP-NPA. It’s uncanny. The PFP reiterates what this
column has been saying all along and states: “We decry what we
perceive as US interference in our internal affairs. We are troubled
by possible US violations of Philippine sovereignty, including
increased US military presence and activity, and its threat to
unilaterally take punitive actions against all alleged Filipino
terrorists.” And here again: “We ask the government to reconsider
its official policy of welcoming the US designation of the CPP-NPA as
a terrorist organization, in view of its dire effects on the peace
negotiations.
Signatories of the PFP statement teem like the sands of the sea. They
represent all sectors of civil society and cannot just be ignored by
the government. |