The largest ecumenical grouping of church leaders in the country called on the government and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) to resume peace talks that were stalled two years ago.
鈥淢ay this season of hope inspire both parties to break down the dividing wall of hostility听 and engage in principled negotiations to end the decades-old armed conflict in the country,鈥 said the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform (PEPP) in a statement.
The statement was signed by Archbishop Antonio J. Ledesma, S.J., D.D., PEPP co-chair; Bishop Noel A. Pantoja, National President of Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches (PCEC); Rev. Fr. Rex RB Reyes, Jr., general secretary of National Council of Churches in the Philippines (NCCP), and Bishop Emeritus Deogracias S. I帽iguez, Jr., co-chair of the Ecumenical Bishops鈥 Forum (EBF).
The talks were called off on April 2013 after a 22-month impasse.
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Recently, Ola Almgren, United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, joined the call for a resumption of the negotiations.
On 8 December, Almgren called for 鈥渁 full and meaningful resumption of the peace process鈥 between the government and the NDFP in the context of the human rights challenges of the Indigenous Peoples of Mindanao as one of the longer term actions to end the Lumad crisis.
The government and the NDFP have declared respective ceasefires up to Jan. 3, 2016.
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Meanwhile, Senator Grace Poe on Sunday called for an indefinite extension of the ceasefire.
鈥淎n extension of the ceasefire would be a goodwill gesture that could lead us back to the negotiating table. Armed conflicts must end. People are already weary of violence,鈥 Poe said.
鈥淲e should not give up on peace. That is not an option for us,鈥 Poe said.听 鈥淟et us not deprive our people of genuine progress. It鈥檚 time to move forward.鈥
Socio-economic reforms and progress, Poe reiterated, could only exist in a 鈥減eaceful and just society.鈥