Communist rebels kill 3 soldiers — military
Communist guerrillas killed three soldiers in the first fatal clash since the presumptive President-elect offered to restart stalled peace talks, the military said Sunday.
The soldiers were on Negros on Saturday investigating reports that New People’s Army guerrillas were extorting money from villagers when they clashed with about 10 rebels, leaving three soldiers dead and two wounded, a military report said.
The violence comes just days after presumptive President-elect Rodrigo Duterte said he was open to resuming peace talks aimed at ending a decades-old insurgency that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.
After his May 9 election victory, Duterte’s spokesman said the firebrand politician may release jailed communist rebels in an effort to reopen peace talks.
Incumbent leader Benigno Aquino ended talks with the Communist Party of the Philippines in 2013 over the rebels’ demand for the unconditional release of their detained comrades, which his government was unwilling to grant.
Article continues after this advertisementDuterte, a hardline mayor accused of running vigilante death squads that have allegedly killed more than a thousand crime suspects in Davao City, is a friend of Netherlands-based Jose Maria Sison, who set up the communist party in 1968.
Article continues after this advertisementDuterte, who takes office on June 30, has previously described himself as a socialist.
Running for almost half a century, the communist insurgency has claimed 30,000 lives, according to military estimates.
The rebels’ strength has dwindled to less than 4,000 fighters from a peak of more than 26,000 in the late 1980s, according to the military.
However it retains support among the deeply poor in the rural Philippines.