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New People's Army

The New People's Army (Filipino: Bagong Hukbong Bayan), abbreviated NPA or BHB, is the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP),[13]: 119  based primarily in the Philippine countryside.[3] It acts as the CPP's principal organization, aiming to consolidate political power from what it sees as the present "bourgeois reactionary puppet government" and to aid in the "people's democratic revolution".[13]: 119  Founded on March 29, 1969,[1]: 96  by the collaboration of Jose Maria Sison and former members of the Hukbalahap led by Bernabe Buscayno, the NPA has since waged a guerrilla war based on the Maoist strategy of protracted people's war.[14] The NPA is one of the key figures in the ongoing Communist rebellion in the Philippines, the longest ongoing conflict in the country.

New People's Army
Bagong Hukbong Bayan
Logo of the New People's Army
Founders
Leadervacant
Dates of operation1969–present[1]: 96 
Split to
Motives
Active regions22 guerrilla fronts (2022)[2]
Operates in 110 guerrilla fronts across 73 provinces in the Philippines (CPP claim, 2018)[3][non-primary source needed]
IdeologyMarxism–Leninism–Maoism
StatusActive
Size
Part of
AlliesKabataang Makabayan
OpponentsState opponents

Non-state opponents:

Battles and warsCommunist rebellion in the Philippines
Designated as a terrorist group by
WebsitePhilippine Revolution Web Central
Preceded by
Hukbalahap
The current flag of the NPA

The NPA operates in the Philippine countryside, where the CPP alleges it has established itself in 73 out of the country's 81 provinces, across over 110 guerrilla fronts.[3][non-primary source needed] In guerrilla zones where the NPA has entrenched itself, the CPP–NPA has established a People's Democratic Government (Gobyernong Bayan), which operates independently of the Philippine government. Within these zones, income taxes which would nominally go to the government treasury instead go to the NPA, which they use to fund community services.[15]

The NPA, as represented by the National Democratic Front of the Philippines, is a party to ongoing peace talks between the People's Democratic Government and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines. Peace negotiations have reached an impasse, with the Rodrigo Duterte administration unilaterally announcing the termination of peace talks in 2019.[16] Negotiations between the GRP and the NDFP stalled on signing of the Comprehensive Agreement on Socio-Economic Reforms (CASER),[17] and the issue of localized peace talks between individual units of the NPA.[18]

The Office of the President of the Philippines designated the NPA as a terrorist group, along with the CPP.[7][8] The United States[9] and the European Union[10] have designated the CPP–NPA as "foreign terrorist organizations" in 2002 and 2005, respectively. Japan's Public Security Intelligence Agency designated the NPA as a "major international terrorist organization" (主な国際テロ組織).[11]

History

The New People's Army was established on March 29, 1969, following the split of the old Communist Party (Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930) into Lava and Guerrero factions. The 1960s saw a resurgence in radical ideology, following the establishment of Kabataang Makabayan and the emerging popularity of Mao Tse Tsung Thought as an advancement of ideological Marxism-Leninism. In 1966, Jose Maria Sison, under the nom de guerre Amado Guerrero, wrote Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party!, a treatise which criticized the old Lavaite leadership and emphasized the need to follow Mao Tse Tung Thought to foster re-establishment.[19] The conflict continued until December 26, 1968, when the Communist Party of the Philippines was formally re-established along Maoist lines, and the entire issue was termed the First Great Rectification Movement.

After re-establishing the CPP, Guerrero set about to establishing the People's Army. KM cadres in Tarlac had contacted Guerrero and linked him with Bernabe Buscayno, a former member of the older Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan. Relations were established and the New People's Army was formally founded on March 29, in continuity with the previous Hukbalahap.[20][non-primary source needed] At the time the NPA only had 60 armed fighters.[21]

The NPA was immediately tasked with the role of implementing the CPP's program for a People's Democratic Revolution. In the Declaration of the New People's Army, Amado Guerrero outlined the following as its main tasks:[1]: 113–117 

  1. The New People's Army Must Engage in Party Rebuilding
  2. The New People's Army Must Carry Out Agrarian Revolution, Build Rural Bases, and Advance the Armed Struggle
  3. The New People's Army Must Build the National United Front

The NPA quickly spread alongside organizational work of the CPP. By 1972, it had established 735 barrio organizing committees and 60 barrio organizing committees, governing an estimated 400,000 people all over the country.[22] The CPP used the NPA to establish barrio organizing and revolutionary committees, which served as instruments in administering the people's revolutionary government. Barrio organizing committees were established to lower land rent, eliminate usury, and ensure the "annihilation of enemy troops and the elimination of landlord despots, enemy spies, and such bad elements as cattle rustlers, extortionists, robbers, murderers, arsonists, and the like."[22] Once established, barrio revolutionary committees replaced the BOC to formally establish the area as a stronghold of the revolutionary government. The NPA at the time had 72 squads of 800 regulars armed with weapons.

Over the next decade, the NPA expanded in response to Ferdinand Marcos and the declaration of martial law in the Philippines. The CPP and the NPA were successfully able to establish themselves in the countryside, reaching a mass base of over one million people, with 1,000 fighters armed with high-powered rifles by 1977[21] By 1981, the NPA began engaging in tactical offensives involving company-sized units emerged, particularly in the Southern Mindanao region. By 1983, the NPA fielded 5,000 high-powered rifles. By 1988, it had 10,000 high-powered rifles, with 7,000 inferior firearms. It operated in 60 guerrilla fronts across 63 provinces of the Philippines.[21]

Changes in tactics and Kampanyang Ahos

The momentum gained in the 1980s was also given to multiple setbacks. Changes in strategy and internal conflicts within the CPP resulted in ideological, political, and organizational losses for the CPP–NPA–NDF. The CPP devised a plan called a "strategic counteroffensive" (SCO) with the aim of "leaping over" to a higher stage of armed revolution and quickly win the revolution. The SCO program led to "regularization" of units, urban partisan actions, peasant uprisings, and an insurrectionist concept of "seizing opportunities".[21]

From 1981, the NPA enjoyed strategic gains in Mindanao and was able to consolidate its forces there. However, the Mindanao Commission adopted a strategy of designating areas as Red (where military struggle was applicable) or White (where political struggle and insurrection was applicable) along with the SCO program.[23]

Problems in discipline also emerged during this time, as well as deterioration of the NPA's ability to conduct mass work. These ideological and organizational shortcomings, coupled with the Corazon Aquino administration's counter-insurgency program, Oplan Lambat Bitag, managed to severely harm the NPA and the CPP as a whole.[23][24]: 144 

In 1989, the NPA assassinated U.S. Army Colonel James "Nick" Rowe, founder of the U.S. Army Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) course. Colonel Rowe was part of a military assistance program to the Philippine Army. The NPA asserts that this made him a legitimate military target.[25][26]

Second Great Rectification Movement

By 1991, the CPP central committee had assessed the mistakes of the previous decade and carried out the Second Great Rectification Movement from 1992 until declaring a success in 1998. The Second Great Rectification Movement, however, saw splits in the CPP ranks, with rejectionists such as Filemon Lagman, Romulo Kintanar, Etta Rosales, and others leaving the CPP and forming their own groups based on ideological differences. The Alex Boncayao Brigade, notorious for its partisan activities, left the CPP with Lagman and formed the Revolutionary Proletarian Army.

In 1998, the GRP and NDFP signed the Comprehensive Agreement on Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CAHRIHL), which establishes rules of engagement for both parties in accordance to international rules of war.[27] The NPA, as a signatory to CAHIRHL, is bound to international agreements stated in the Geneva Convention and thus follows rules set for prisoners of war,[28] command-detonated explosives,[29] and similar rules of engagement.

Since then, rejectionists have been met with reprisals. Lagman was ambushed in the University of the Philippines in 2001 by armed gunmen and slain.[30] The NPA has admitted to killing Kintanar in 2003.[31] Other rejectionists, like Rosales and Walden Bello continue as members of the social-democratic Akbayan party. Ricardo Reyes is active in local politics, having last attempted to secure the mayoralty of Pasig in 2010.

Post-Rectification

The CPP declared the Second Great Rectification Movement as having been "conclusively won" in 1998. Since then, it has re-affirmed that the CPP is in absolute command of the NPA, outlining that its most pressing task is to "defeat and destroy the US-created and US-supported reactionary Armed Forces of the Philippines.[32]

Since then, it has continued to wage a protracted people's war through the use of guerrilla tactics, while steadily expanding. In 2002, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo requested for the United States Department of State to declare the CPP-NPA as a foreign terrorist group, which was granted on August 2.[9] This was in line with her counter-insurgency program, Oplan Bantay Laya, which aimed to end the conflict between the AFP and the NPA. In 2005, the European Union Common Foreign and Security Policy included the NPA as a terrorist group.[10] Despite these efforts, the NPA has declared Oplan Bantay Laya I a "failure", citing that it did not lose a single guerrilla front despite the AFP's efforts of concentrating its forces in 300 to 600 barrios at any given time.[33]

In 2005, the NPA reported that its strength had surpassed its previous peak in 2005. Arroyo, at this time, had replaced OBL1 with Oplan Bantay Laya 2, which aimed at "ending the revolutionary movement by 2010".[33] OBL2, along with what the CPP identified as "conservatism" in the ranks, led to a decline in NPA strength until 2009.[34][non-primary source needed]

During the administration of Benigno Aquino III, OBL2 was replaced by Oplan Bayanihan, which had a more "people-centered" approach compared to OBL's military-heavy tactics.[35] NPA membership, at this time, steadily rose. By 2017, NPA strength had surpassed the previous 2005 peak by 3%.[34][non-primary source needed]

As of 2018, its strength is tallied at greater than the 5,600 rifles recorded in the CPP's 1985 plenum.[3][non-primary source needed] The Central Committee has stated in its 2017 Congress that it has a five-year plan with aims to "carry forward the antifascist, antifeudal and anti-imperialist movement and overthrow the tyrannical US-Duterte regime, and bring the protracted people's war to the advanced phase of the strategic defensive, in order to reach the threshold of the strategic stalemate".[34][non-primary source needed] The five-year plan:

  1. Aims to develop 7 to 10 advanced regions in terms of strength, spread, and advancement of guerrilla warfare, with approximately 20,000 Red fighters across spread across the country.
  2. Calls for the development of sub-regions, with one or two undersized companies and 9 to 15 horizontal platoons, interlocked across three to five company-sized guerrilla fronts.
  3. Aims for every region and sub-region should have one company-sized unit for every nine platoon-sized units, with recruitment campaigns utilized to achieve this goal.

The CPP five-year plan emphasizes the need to combat conservatism in the NPA ranks, the importance of mass-work in building and strengthening Party groups, and the intensification of guerrilla warfare against enemy targets.

The NPA has a long record of attacking mining corporations and logging companies which they accuse of harming the forests of the Philippines. In 2011 in revenge for the murder of anti-mining activist Rabenio Sungit, the NPA attacked three mines in Mindanao, causing 190 million dollars in damages.[36] Some corporations willing to pay NPA taxes for local social programs are allowed to continue operating within NPA territory, those who do not are often attacked by the NPA who burn their equipment.[37]

Ceasefires

  • In November 27, 1986, the Philippine government and rebels signed a 60-day ceasefire. This deal was rescinded in January 1987 following the events of the Mendiola massacre, where police fired on protesters and killed 13 farmers, injuring 30 more.
  • The peace talks between the two sides were intermittent and inconclusive since 1986, bogging down in 2012 when the government refused to free political prisoners. They resumed in August 2016, when Duterte released 19 rebel leaders from jail. However, President Duterte scrapped talks in February 2017, when rebels ambushed an army convoy, breaking a unilateral ceasefire that had held for five months. Both sides returned to the negotiating table on April 1, 2017.
  • In April 2017, peace talks between the National Democratic Front and the Philippine government brokered by Norway took place in the Netherlands, hoping to reach a political settlement in twelve months to end the conflict. This was the second time the two sides agreed on a bilateral truce since November 1986.[38]
  • As of 2019, the Duterte administration unilaterally declared the end of peace talks between the GRP and the NDFP, focusing instead on their counter-insurgency program Oplan Kapanatagan and what it terms as a "whole-of-nation" approach.[39][40]

Ideology

The NPA, being the primary organization of the CPP, follows a theoretical ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.[13]: 119  It regards the Philippines as a semi-colonial, semi-feudal state where political and economic power is concentrated on a local class of landlords and comprador bourgeoisie, aided by foreign imperialists, chief of which is United States imperialism. The CPP regards a two-stage revolution of People's Democratic Revolution followed by socialist reconstruction as the path to achieve socialism and wrest control away from the bourgeois.[14]

The CPP-NPA regards three things as central to waging revolution: armed struggle, agrarian revolution, and the building of mass-bases in the countryside. The NPA, aside from being a military force, also puts emphasis in carrying out land reform and organizational work to ensure that villages become bases of the people's democratic government.[13]: 120 

The CPP regards armed struggle as a necessary component of revolution coinciding with the Party's organizational work. The NPA, as the central agent of armed struggle, serves to achieve its central task of "destroying and dismantling the rule of the enemy and taking their political power".[14] In waging armed revolution, the NPA follows the strategic line of protracted people's war by "encircling the cities from the countryside until conditions are ripe for seizing the cities through a strategic offensive".[41]: 48 [non-primary source needed]

The NPA identifies three stages in waging armed struggle: strategic defensive, strategic stalemate, and strategic offensive.[13]: 120–1  It regards itself as yet unable to conduct symmetric warfare in the urban centers and thus regards the people's war as being in a stage of strategic defensive moving to a stage of strategic stalemate.[41]: 50  During the stage of strategic defensive, the NPA "maintains the initiative in tactical offensives against the strategic military advantage of the enemy", making use of guerrilla tactics to attack targets and defend guerrilla zones, while armed partisans perform special roles in the cities.[13]: 121  The second stage is strategic stalemate, where fighting force is more or less equal, while the last stage is that of strategic offensive, where the NPA has developed its strength capable of assaulting military camps and cities.

The NPA regards itself as waging a revolution ultimately stemming from the "unfinished" revolution of the Katipunan, calling itself a revolution of the "new type"; whereas the Katipunan waged a "bourgeois democratic revolution of the old type, the NPA is waging a "proletarian socialist revolution" in the same vein as the October Revolution in Russia.[14]

Promotion of LGBT rights

In 2005, the NPA conducted the first recorded gay marriage in the history of the Philippines.[42] In contrast to the deeply religious nature of mainstream Filipino society, the NPA leadership openly accepts gay and lesbian people into their ranks. However, members' attitudes within the various and largely isolated guerrilla branches can vary.

The former Filipino president Duterte mocked the NPA's acceptance of LGBT members, erroneously claiming that '40 percent' of NPA members are gay.[43] Duterte also claimed that NPA guerrillas once attempted to sexually seduce his son.[44] NPA co-founder Jose Maria Sison confirmed that the NPA openly accepted LGBT people and called Duterte's claims "unbelievable".[45]

International relations

The Philippine Army had apprehended Eduardo Quitoriano in 1994, who was a NPA liaison officer to the Japanese Red Army and involved in a money laundering case in Switzerland.[46]

It is reported that the NPA had supported the Naxalites (of India) during the Naxalite–Maoist insurgency by providing training and technical support.[47]

The CPP-NPA received large-scale support, in the form of arms, $7 million and logistical support, from the Gaddafi government in Libya.[48][49]

Legal status

The Government of the Philippines has outlawed the NPA along with the CPP as through the Anti-Subversion Act of 1957 which branded the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930 and the Hukbalahap as an "organized conspiracy". As splinter groups which had roots to the two organization, the ban extended to the CPP-NPA.[50] The law was repealed by President Fidel Ramos in October 1992, decriminalizing membership in the NPA and CPP.[51][52]

In December 2017, President Rodrigo Duterte declared the NPA along with the CPP as terrorist organizations.[7][8] The NPA is also designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the U.S. State Department[9] and as a terrorist group by the EU,[10] and New Zealand.[12]

The Anti-Terror Council of the Philippines designated CPP-NPA as a terrorist organization in the Philippines on December 9, 2020.[53]

The Manila Regional Trial Court has junked a proscription case by the Department of Justice seeking to designate the CPP-NPA as a terrorist organization on September 22, 2022.[54] The court concluded that the constitution and program of the CPP-NPA, including its justification for armed struggle, fall under "rebellion" and do not constitute the legal definition of "terrorism".

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Sison, Jose Maria (2013). "Declaration of the New People's Army". Foundation for resuming the Philippine revolution : selected writings, 1968 to 1972. ISBN 978-1-62847-920-1.
  2. ^ a b Punongbayan, Michael. "Only 2,112 NPA fighters left – AFP". Philstar.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Great Achievements of the CPP in 50 Years of Waging Revolution". September 8, 2018. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  4. ^ "The Philippines' Maoist Guerillas Vow to Resist 'Imperialist China'". The Geopolitics. July 17, 2021.
  5. ^ "The Maoist Guerrillas of the Philippines Are Now Pointing Their Guns at China". The News Lens. April 29, 2019.
  6. ^ "(Outlawed) Philippine Communist Party declares war on Chinese companies". AsiaNews.
  7. ^ a b c Ballaran, Jhoanna (December 5, 2017). . Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on December 6, 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c (PDF). Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. December 5, 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 15, 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d . U.S. Department of State. Archived from the original on May 15, 2019. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d . EUR-Lex. July 30, 2020. Archived from the original on September 17, 2020. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
  11. ^ a b [Overview of major international terrorist organizations, global terrorist and armed groups, etc., and recent trends] (in Japanese). Public Security Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on January 17, 2023. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  12. ^ a b . New Zealand Police. Archived from the original on November 19, 2020. Retrieved March 2, 2020.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Sison, Jose Maria (2013). "Basic Rules of the New People's Army". Foundation for resuming the Philippine revolution : selected writings, 1968 to 1972. ISBN 978-1-62847-920-1.
  14. ^ a b c d Guerrero, Amado (December 1, 1974). Specific Characteristics of Our People's War.
  15. ^ Cupin, Bea (June 10, 2016). "NPA has 'right' to collect revolutionary tax – NDF". Rappler. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  16. ^ "Duterte announces 'permanent termination' of peace talks with Reds". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  17. ^ IV, Antonio L. Colina (April 4, 2017). "NDF: CASER first, then ceasefire, or sign both simultaneously | MindaNews". Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  18. ^ "Gov't insists on localized peace talks with Reds". MindaNews. April 16, 2019. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  19. ^ Guerrero, Amado (1966). Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party!.
  20. ^ "ON NINOY AQUINO'S RELATIONS WITH CPP & NPA". josemariasison.org. October 2010. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d Liwanag, Armando. Brief Review of the History of the CPP.
  22. ^ a b Guerrero, Amado (March 3, 1972). "Summing Up Our Experience After Three Years". Ang Bayan.
  23. ^ a b CPP Executive Committee (November 30, 1992). General Review of Important Events and Decisions.
  24. ^ Patricio N. Abinales (2008). "Kahos Revisited: The Mindanao Commission and Its Narrative of a Tragedy". In Rutten, Rosanne (ed.). Brokering a revolution : cadres in a Philippine insurgency. Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-971-550-553-6.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on March 28, 2008.
  26. ^ "Bio, Rowe, James N. Nick". Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  27. ^ Fonbuena, Carmela. "PH gov't, NDF approve peace pact frameworks". Rappler. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  28. ^ Manlupig, Karlos. "NPA plans release of 15 soldiers, militiamen". newsinfo.inquirer.net. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  29. ^ Gregorio, Joseph. "AFP and PNP lying; Red fighters only use command-detonated explosives—CPDF". kodao.org. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  30. ^ "'Popoy' slain in UP ambush". philstar.com. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  31. ^ "NPA admits killing Kintanar". gulfnews.com. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  32. ^ Liwanag, Armando (December 26, 1998). Hail the 30th Anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines.
  33. ^ a b Resist and frustrate Oplan Bantay Laya II. Communist Party of the Philippines. July 12, 2007.
  34. ^ a b c Sison, Jose Maria. "The Filipino people's revolutionary armed struggle for national and social liberation in the past 50 years". cpp.ph. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
  35. ^ "AFP junks 'Bantay Laya' vs rebels, adopts 'Bayanihan'". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  36. ^ Holden, William N. (May 29, 2014). "The New People's Army and Neoliberal Mining in the Philippines: A Struggle against Primitive Accumulation". Capitalism Nature Socialism. 25 (3): 61–62. doi:10.1080/10455752.2014.922109. S2CID 143384962.
  37. ^ "Inside the New People's Army (Part 2)". RedFish Documentaries. April 19, 2018. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  38. ^ Villamor, Felipe (April 5, 2017). "Philippines and Communist Rebels Agree to a Temporary Cease-Fire". The New York Times. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
  39. ^ Roque, EJ (March 21, 2019). . Philippine News Agency. Archived from the original on March 22, 2019. Retrieved September 17, 2020.
  40. ^ Ranada, Pia. "Duterte signs proclamation labeling CPP-NPA as terrorist group". Rappler. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  41. ^ a b Constitution and Program (PDF). 2016.
  42. ^ Alburo, Kaira Zoe K. (January 2011). "Brothers, Lovers, and Revolution: Negotiating Military Masculinity and Homosexual Identity in a Revolutionary Movement in the Philippines". Asia-Pacific Social Science Review. 11. no 2: 27–28 – via ResearchGate.
  43. ^ Jackman, Josh (February 26, 2019). "Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte claims '40 percent' of rebels are gay". Pink News. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  44. ^ Romero, Alexis (February 25, 2019). "40% of NPA rebels are gay – Duterte". Phil Star Global. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  45. ^ Glauert, Rik (February 27, 2019). "Philippine president claims 40% of country's communist rebels are gay". Gay Star News. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  46. ^ Mickolus, Edward F. and Simmons, Susan L. (2014). The 50 Worst Terrorist Attacks. p. 8.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on April 22, 2010. Retrieved September 1, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  48. ^ "Libyan terrorism: The case against Gaddafi. - Free Online Library".
  49. ^ "WikiLeaks cable: Gaddafi funded, trained CPP-NPA rebels". September 6, 2011.
  50. ^ . Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. Archived from the original on June 20, 1957. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  51. ^ "Ramos legalises Communist Party, frees 48 rebels". New Straits Times. Reuter. September 23, 1992. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  52. ^ . Archived from the original on September 22, 1992. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  53. ^ "Anti-Terrorism Council designates CPP, NPA as terrorist groups".
  54. ^ https://twitter.com/cnnphilippines/status/1572758885341208582[bare URL]

External links

  • "Armed Conflict Report 2002, Philippines-CPP/NPA" (PDF).
  • .
  • (archived from on February 25, 2008). Extract of article about NPA's tactics and strategy, May 2006 (full article needs subscription).
  • "Amnesty International Report 2003 – The Philippines".

people, army, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources New People s Army news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The New People s Army Filipino Bagong Hukbong Bayan abbreviated NPA or BHB is the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines CPP 13 119 based primarily in the Philippine countryside 3 It acts as the CPP s principal organization aiming to consolidate political power from what it sees as the present bourgeois reactionary puppet government and to aid in the people s democratic revolution 13 119 Founded on March 29 1969 1 96 by the collaboration of Jose Maria Sison and former members of the Hukbalahap led by Bernabe Buscayno the NPA has since waged a guerrilla war based on the Maoist strategy of protracted people s war 14 The NPA is one of the key figures in the ongoing Communist rebellion in the Philippines the longest ongoing conflict in the country New People s ArmyBagong Hukbong BayanLogo of the New People s ArmyFoundersJose Maria Sison Bernabe BuscaynoLeadervacantDates of operation1969 present 1 96 Split toAlex Boncayao Brigade Revolutionary Proletarian Army Rebolusyonaryong Hukbong Bayan Cordillera People s Liberation ArmyMotivesEstablishment of a People s Democratic Government through proletarian revolutionActive regions22 guerrilla fronts 2022 2 Operates in 110 guerrilla fronts across 73 provinces in the Philippines CPP claim 2018 3 non primary source needed IdeologyMarxism Leninism MaoismStatusActiveSize2 112 AFP estimate 2022 2 5 600 CPP claim 2018 3 non primary source needed Unknown number of lightly armed and unarmed supportersPart ofCommunist Party of the Philippines National Democratic Front of the PhilippinesAlliesKabataang MakabayanOpponentsState opponents Philippines United States China 4 5 6 Non state opponents Moro National Liberation FrontBattles and warsCommunist rebellion in the PhilippinesDesignated as a terrorist group by Philippines 7 8 United States 9 European Union 10 Japan 11 New Zealand 12 WebsitePhilippine Revolution Web CentralPreceded byHukbalahapThe current flag of the NPA The NPA operates in the Philippine countryside where the CPP alleges it has established itself in 73 out of the country s 81 provinces across over 110 guerrilla fronts 3 non primary source needed In guerrilla zones where the NPA has entrenched itself the CPP NPA has established a People s Democratic Government Gobyernong Bayan which operates independently of the Philippine government Within these zones income taxes which would nominally go to the government treasury instead go to the NPA which they use to fund community services 15 The NPA as represented by the National Democratic Front of the Philippines is a party to ongoing peace talks between the People s Democratic Government and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace negotiations have reached an impasse with the Rodrigo Duterte administration unilaterally announcing the termination of peace talks in 2019 16 Negotiations between the GRP and the NDFP stalled on signing of the Comprehensive Agreement on Socio Economic Reforms CASER 17 and the issue of localized peace talks between individual units of the NPA 18 The Office of the President of the Philippines designated the NPA as a terrorist group along with the CPP 7 8 The United States 9 and the European Union 10 have designated the CPP NPA as foreign terrorist organizations in 2002 and 2005 respectively Japan s Public Security Intelligence Agency designated the NPA as a major international terrorist organization 主な国際テロ組織 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Changes in tactics and Kampanyang Ahos 1 2 Second Great Rectification Movement 1 3 Post Rectification 1 4 Ceasefires 2 Ideology 3 Promotion of LGBT rights 4 International relations 5 Legal status 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditMain article Communist rebellion in the Philippines Main article Communism in the Philippines The New People s Army was established on March 29 1969 following the split of the old Communist Party Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas 1930 into Lava and Guerrero factions The 1960s saw a resurgence in radical ideology following the establishment of Kabataang Makabayan and the emerging popularity of Mao Tse Tsung Thought as an advancement of ideological Marxism Leninism In 1966 Jose Maria Sison under the nom de guerre Amado Guerrero wrote Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party a treatise which criticized the old Lavaite leadership and emphasized the need to follow Mao Tse Tung Thought to foster re establishment 19 The conflict continued until December 26 1968 when the Communist Party of the Philippines was formally re established along Maoist lines and the entire issue was termed the First Great Rectification Movement After re establishing the CPP Guerrero set about to establishing the People s Army KM cadres in Tarlac had contacted Guerrero and linked him with Bernabe Buscayno a former member of the older Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan Relations were established and the New People s Army was formally founded on March 29 in continuity with the previous Hukbalahap 20 non primary source needed At the time the NPA only had 60 armed fighters 21 The NPA was immediately tasked with the role of implementing the CPP s program for a People s Democratic Revolution In the Declaration of the New People s Army Amado Guerrero outlined the following as its main tasks 1 113 117 The New People s Army Must Engage in Party Rebuilding The New People s Army Must Carry Out Agrarian Revolution Build Rural Bases and Advance the Armed Struggle The New People s Army Must Build the National United FrontThe NPA quickly spread alongside organizational work of the CPP By 1972 it had established 735 barrio organizing committees and 60 barrio organizing committees governing an estimated 400 000 people all over the country 22 The CPP used the NPA to establish barrio organizing and revolutionary committees which served as instruments in administering the people s revolutionary government Barrio organizing committees were established to lower land rent eliminate usury and ensure the annihilation of enemy troops and the elimination of landlord despots enemy spies and such bad elements as cattle rustlers extortionists robbers murderers arsonists and the like 22 Once established barrio revolutionary committees replaced the BOC to formally establish the area as a stronghold of the revolutionary government The NPA at the time had 72 squads of 800 regulars armed with weapons Over the next decade the NPA expanded in response to Ferdinand Marcos and the declaration of martial law in the Philippines The CPP and the NPA were successfully able to establish themselves in the countryside reaching a mass base of over one million people with 1 000 fighters armed with high powered rifles by 1977 21 By 1981 the NPA began engaging in tactical offensives involving company sized units emerged particularly in the Southern Mindanao region By 1983 the NPA fielded 5 000 high powered rifles By 1988 it had 10 000 high powered rifles with 7 000 inferior firearms It operated in 60 guerrilla fronts across 63 provinces of the Philippines 21 Changes in tactics and Kampanyang Ahos Edit The momentum gained in the 1980s was also given to multiple setbacks Changes in strategy and internal conflicts within the CPP resulted in ideological political and organizational losses for the CPP NPA NDF The CPP devised a plan called a strategic counteroffensive SCO with the aim of leaping over to a higher stage of armed revolution and quickly win the revolution The SCO program led to regularization of units urban partisan actions peasant uprisings and an insurrectionist concept of seizing opportunities 21 From 1981 the NPA enjoyed strategic gains in Mindanao and was able to consolidate its forces there However the Mindanao Commission adopted a strategy of designating areas as Red where military struggle was applicable or White where political struggle and insurrection was applicable along with the SCO program 23 Problems in discipline also emerged during this time as well as deterioration of the NPA s ability to conduct mass work These ideological and organizational shortcomings coupled with the Corazon Aquino administration s counter insurgency program Oplan Lambat Bitag managed to severely harm the NPA and the CPP as a whole 23 24 144 In 1989 the NPA assassinated U S Army Colonel James Nick Rowe founder of the U S Army Survival Evasion Resistance and Escape SERE course Colonel Rowe was part of a military assistance program to the Philippine Army The NPA asserts that this made him a legitimate military target 25 26 Second Great Rectification Movement Edit Main article Second Great Rectification Movement By 1991 the CPP central committee had assessed the mistakes of the previous decade and carried out the Second Great Rectification Movement from 1992 until declaring a success in 1998 The Second Great Rectification Movement however saw splits in the CPP ranks with rejectionists such as Filemon Lagman Romulo Kintanar Etta Rosales and others leaving the CPP and forming their own groups based on ideological differences The Alex Boncayao Brigade notorious for its partisan activities left the CPP with Lagman and formed the Revolutionary Proletarian Army In 1998 the GRP and NDFP signed the Comprehensive Agreement on Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law CAHRIHL which establishes rules of engagement for both parties in accordance to international rules of war 27 The NPA as a signatory to CAHIRHL is bound to international agreements stated in the Geneva Convention and thus follows rules set for prisoners of war 28 command detonated explosives 29 and similar rules of engagement Since then rejectionists have been met with reprisals Lagman was ambushed in the University of the Philippines in 2001 by armed gunmen and slain 30 The NPA has admitted to killing Kintanar in 2003 31 Other rejectionists like Rosales and Walden Bello continue as members of the social democratic Akbayan party Ricardo Reyes is active in local politics having last attempted to secure the mayoralty of Pasig in 2010 Post Rectification Edit The CPP declared the Second Great Rectification Movement as having been conclusively won in 1998 Since then it has re affirmed that the CPP is in absolute command of the NPA outlining that its most pressing task is to defeat and destroy the US created and US supported reactionary Armed Forces of the Philippines 32 Since then it has continued to wage a protracted people s war through the use of guerrilla tactics while steadily expanding In 2002 President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo requested for the United States Department of State to declare the CPP NPA as a foreign terrorist group which was granted on August 2 9 This was in line with her counter insurgency program Oplan Bantay Laya which aimed to end the conflict between the AFP and the NPA In 2005 the European Union Common Foreign and Security Policy included the NPA as a terrorist group 10 Despite these efforts the NPA has declared Oplan Bantay Laya I a failure citing that it did not lose a single guerrilla front despite the AFP s efforts of concentrating its forces in 300 to 600 barrios at any given time 33 In 2005 the NPA reported that its strength had surpassed its previous peak in 2005 Arroyo at this time had replaced OBL1 with Oplan Bantay Laya 2 which aimed at ending the revolutionary movement by 2010 33 OBL2 along with what the CPP identified as conservatism in the ranks led to a decline in NPA strength until 2009 34 non primary source needed During the administration of Benigno Aquino III OBL2 was replaced by Oplan Bayanihan which had a more people centered approach compared to OBL s military heavy tactics 35 NPA membership at this time steadily rose By 2017 NPA strength had surpassed the previous 2005 peak by 3 34 non primary source needed As of 2018 its strength is tallied at greater than the 5 600 rifles recorded in the CPP s 1985 plenum 3 non primary source needed The Central Committee has stated in its 2017 Congress that it has a five year plan with aims to carry forward the antifascist antifeudal and anti imperialist movement and overthrow the tyrannical US Duterte regime and bring the protracted people s war to the advanced phase of the strategic defensive in order to reach the threshold of the strategic stalemate 34 non primary source needed The five year plan Aims to develop 7 to 10 advanced regions in terms of strength spread and advancement of guerrilla warfare with approximately 20 000 Red fighters across spread across the country Calls for the development of sub regions with one or two undersized companies and 9 to 15 horizontal platoons interlocked across three to five company sized guerrilla fronts Aims for every region and sub region should have one company sized unit for every nine platoon sized units with recruitment campaigns utilized to achieve this goal The CPP five year plan emphasizes the need to combat conservatism in the NPA ranks the importance of mass work in building and strengthening Party groups and the intensification of guerrilla warfare against enemy targets The NPA has a long record of attacking mining corporations and logging companies which they accuse of harming the forests of the Philippines In 2011 in revenge for the murder of anti mining activist Rabenio Sungit the NPA attacked three mines in Mindanao causing 190 million dollars in damages 36 Some corporations willing to pay NPA taxes for local social programs are allowed to continue operating within NPA territory those who do not are often attacked by the NPA who burn their equipment 37 Ceasefires Edit In November 27 1986 the Philippine government and rebels signed a 60 day ceasefire This deal was rescinded in January 1987 following the events of the Mendiola massacre where police fired on protesters and killed 13 farmers injuring 30 more The peace talks between the two sides were intermittent and inconclusive since 1986 bogging down in 2012 when the government refused to free political prisoners They resumed in August 2016 when Duterte released 19 rebel leaders from jail However President Duterte scrapped talks in February 2017 when rebels ambushed an army convoy breaking a unilateral ceasefire that had held for five months Both sides returned to the negotiating table on April 1 2017 In April 2017 peace talks between the National Democratic Front and the Philippine government brokered by Norway took place in the Netherlands hoping to reach a political settlement in twelve months to end the conflict This was the second time the two sides agreed on a bilateral truce since November 1986 38 As of 2019 the Duterte administration unilaterally declared the end of peace talks between the GRP and the NDFP focusing instead on their counter insurgency program Oplan Kapanatagan and what it terms as a whole of nation approach 39 40 Ideology EditThe NPA being the primary organization of the CPP follows a theoretical ideology of Marxism Leninism Maoism 13 119 It regards the Philippines as a semi colonial semi feudal state where political and economic power is concentrated on a local class of landlords and comprador bourgeoisie aided by foreign imperialists chief of which is United States imperialism The CPP regards a two stage revolution of People s Democratic Revolution followed by socialist reconstruction as the path to achieve socialism and wrest control away from the bourgeois 14 The CPP NPA regards three things as central to waging revolution armed struggle agrarian revolution and the building of mass bases in the countryside The NPA aside from being a military force also puts emphasis in carrying out land reform and organizational work to ensure that villages become bases of the people s democratic government 13 120 The CPP regards armed struggle as a necessary component of revolution coinciding with the Party s organizational work The NPA as the central agent of armed struggle serves to achieve its central task of destroying and dismantling the rule of the enemy and taking their political power 14 In waging armed revolution the NPA follows the strategic line of protracted people s war by encircling the cities from the countryside until conditions are ripe for seizing the cities through a strategic offensive 41 48 non primary source needed The NPA identifies three stages in waging armed struggle strategic defensive strategic stalemate and strategic offensive 13 120 1 It regards itself as yet unable to conduct symmetric warfare in the urban centers and thus regards the people s war as being in a stage of strategic defensive moving to a stage of strategic stalemate 41 50 During the stage of strategic defensive the NPA maintains the initiative in tactical offensives against the strategic military advantage of the enemy making use of guerrilla tactics to attack targets and defend guerrilla zones while armed partisans perform special roles in the cities 13 121 The second stage is strategic stalemate where fighting force is more or less equal while the last stage is that of strategic offensive where the NPA has developed its strength capable of assaulting military camps and cities The NPA regards itself as waging a revolution ultimately stemming from the unfinished revolution of the Katipunan calling itself a revolution of the new type whereas the Katipunan waged a bourgeois democratic revolution of the old type the NPA is waging a proletarian socialist revolution in the same vein as the October Revolution in Russia 14 Promotion of LGBT rights EditIn 2005 the NPA conducted the first recorded gay marriage in the history of the Philippines 42 In contrast to the deeply religious nature of mainstream Filipino society the NPA leadership openly accepts gay and lesbian people into their ranks However members attitudes within the various and largely isolated guerrilla branches can vary The former Filipino president Duterte mocked the NPA s acceptance of LGBT members erroneously claiming that 40 percent of NPA members are gay 43 Duterte also claimed that NPA guerrillas once attempted to sexually seduce his son 44 NPA co founder Jose Maria Sison confirmed that the NPA openly accepted LGBT people and called Duterte s claims unbelievable 45 International relations EditThe Philippine Army had apprehended Eduardo Quitoriano in 1994 who was a NPA liaison officer to the Japanese Red Army and involved in a money laundering case in Switzerland 46 It is reported that the NPA had supported the Naxalites of India during the Naxalite Maoist insurgency by providing training and technical support 47 The CPP NPA received large scale support in the form of arms 7 million and logistical support from the Gaddafi government in Libya 48 49 Legal status EditThe Government of the Philippines has outlawed the NPA along with the CPP as through the Anti Subversion Act of 1957 which branded the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas 1930 and the Hukbalahap as an organized conspiracy As splinter groups which had roots to the two organization the ban extended to the CPP NPA 50 The law was repealed by President Fidel Ramos in October 1992 decriminalizing membership in the NPA and CPP 51 52 In December 2017 President Rodrigo Duterte declared the NPA along with the CPP as terrorist organizations 7 8 The NPA is also designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the U S State Department 9 and as a terrorist group by the EU 10 and New Zealand 12 The Anti Terror Council of the Philippines designated CPP NPA as a terrorist organization in the Philippines on December 9 2020 53 The Manila Regional Trial Court has junked a proscription case by the Department of Justice seeking to designate the CPP NPA as a terrorist organization on September 22 2022 54 The court concluded that the constitution and program of the CPP NPA including its justification for armed struggle fall under rebellion and do not constitute the legal definition of terrorism See also EditCommunist rebellion in the Philippines Moro National Liberation Front Jose Maria SisonReferences Edit a b c Sison Jose Maria 2013 Declaration of the New People s Army Foundation for resuming the Philippine revolution selected writings 1968 to 1972 ISBN 978 1 62847 920 1 a b Punongbayan Michael Only 2 112 NPA fighters left AFP Philstar com a b c d e Great Achievements of the CPP in 50 Years of Waging Revolution September 8 2018 Retrieved December 4 2019 The Philippines Maoist Guerillas Vow to Resist Imperialist China The Geopolitics July 17 2021 The Maoist Guerrillas of the Philippines Are Now Pointing Their Guns at China The News Lens April 29 2019 Outlawed Philippine Communist Party declares war on Chinese companies AsiaNews a b c Ballaran Jhoanna December 5 2017 Duterte declares CPP NPA as terrorist organizations Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on December 6 2017 Retrieved September 17 2020 a b c Proclamation No 374 s 2017 PDF Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines December 5 2017 Archived from the original PDF on December 15 2017 Retrieved September 17 2020 a b c d Foreign Terrorist Organizations U S Department of State Archived from the original on May 15 2019 Retrieved September 18 2020 a b c d Council Implementing Regulation EU 2020 1128 EUR Lex July 30 2020 Archived from the original on September 17 2020 Retrieved September 18 2020 a b 主な国際テロ組織 世界のテロ 武装組織等の概要及び最近の動向 Overview of major international terrorist organizations global terrorist and armed groups etc and recent trends in Japanese Public Security Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on January 17 2023 Retrieved January 19 2023 a b Lists associated with Resolution 1373 New Zealand Police Archived from the original on November 19 2020 Retrieved March 2 2020 a b c d e f Sison Jose Maria 2013 Basic Rules of the New People s Army Foundation for resuming the Philippine revolution selected writings 1968 to 1972 ISBN 978 1 62847 920 1 a b c d Guerrero Amado December 1 1974 Specific Characteristics of Our People s War Cupin Bea June 10 2016 NPA has right to collect revolutionary tax NDF Rappler Retrieved March 20 2019 Duterte announces permanent termination of peace talks with Reds ABS CBN News Retrieved December 4 2019 IV Antonio L Colina April 4 2017 NDF CASER first then ceasefire or sign both simultaneously MindaNews Retrieved March 20 2019 Gov t insists on localized peace talks with Reds MindaNews April 16 2019 Retrieved December 4 2019 Guerrero Amado 1966 Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party ON NINOY AQUINO S RELATIONS WITH CPP amp NPA josemariasison org October 2010 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d Liwanag Armando Brief Review of the History of the CPP a b Guerrero Amado March 3 1972 Summing Up Our Experience After Three Years Ang Bayan a b CPP Executive Committee November 30 1992 General Review of Important Events and Decisions Patricio N Abinales 2008 Kahos Revisited The Mindanao Commission and Its Narrative of a Tragedy In Rutten Rosanne ed Brokering a revolution cadres in a Philippine insurgency Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 553 6 U S Gives Philippines Lukewarm Reminder to Keep Col Rowe s Killers in Jail Archived from the original on March 28 2008 Bio Rowe James N Nick Retrieved October 24 2018 Fonbuena Carmela PH gov t NDF approve peace pact frameworks Rappler Retrieved December 4 2019 Manlupig Karlos NPA plans release of 15 soldiers militiamen newsinfo inquirer net Retrieved December 4 2019 Gregorio Joseph AFP and PNP lying Red fighters only use command detonated explosives CPDF kodao org Retrieved December 4 2019 Popoy slain in UP ambush philstar com Retrieved December 5 2019 NPA admits killing Kintanar gulfnews com Retrieved December 5 2019 Liwanag Armando December 26 1998 Hail the 30th Anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines a b Resist and frustrate Oplan Bantay Laya II Communist Party of the Philippines July 12 2007 a b c Sison Jose Maria The Filipino people s revolutionary armed struggle for national and social liberation in the past 50 years cpp ph Retrieved December 6 2019 AFP junks Bantay Laya vs rebels adopts Bayanihan ABS CBN News Retrieved December 5 2019 Holden William N May 29 2014 The New People s Army and Neoliberal Mining in the Philippines A Struggle against Primitive Accumulation Capitalism Nature Socialism 25 3 61 62 doi 10 1080 10455752 2014 922109 S2CID 143384962 Inside the New People s Army Part 2 RedFish Documentaries April 19 2018 Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved May 14 2020 Villamor Felipe April 5 2017 Philippines and Communist Rebels Agree to a Temporary Cease Fire The New York Times Retrieved September 1 2019 Roque EJ March 21 2019 Duterte permanently ends peace talks with Reds Philippine News Agency Archived from the original on March 22 2019 Retrieved September 17 2020 Ranada Pia Duterte signs proclamation labeling CPP NPA as terrorist group Rappler Retrieved December 4 2019 a b Constitution and Program PDF 2016 Alburo Kaira Zoe K January 2011 Brothers Lovers and Revolution Negotiating Military Masculinity and Homosexual Identity in a Revolutionary Movement in the Philippines Asia Pacific Social Science Review 11 no 2 27 28 via ResearchGate Jackman Josh February 26 2019 Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte claims 40 percent of rebels are gay Pink News Retrieved May 5 2020 Romero Alexis February 25 2019 40 of NPA rebels are gay Duterte Phil Star Global Retrieved May 5 2020 Glauert Rik February 27 2019 Philippine president claims 40 of country s communist rebels are gay Gay Star News Retrieved May 5 2020 Mickolus Edward F and Simmons Susan L 2014 The 50 Worst Terrorist Attacks p 8 Philippine reds export armed struggle Archived from the original on April 22 2010 Retrieved September 1 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Libyan terrorism The case against Gaddafi Free Online Library WikiLeaks cable Gaddafi funded trained CPP NPA rebels September 6 2011 Anti Subversion Act Chan Robles Virtual Law Library Archived from the original on June 20 1957 Retrieved September 12 2015 Ramos legalises Communist Party frees 48 rebels New Straits Times Reuter September 23 1992 Retrieved September 12 2015 An Act Repealing Republic Act Numbered One Thousand Seven Hundred as Amended Otherwise Known as the Anti Subversion Act Archived from the original on September 22 1992 Retrieved September 12 2015 Anti Terrorism Council designates CPP NPA as terrorist groups https twitter com cnnphilippines status 1572758885341208582 bare URL External links Edit Armed Conflict Report 2002 Philippines CPP NPA PDF U S Department of State Philippine Communist Party Designated Foreign Terrorist Group New People s Army archived from the original on February 25 2008 Extract of article about NPA s tactics and strategy May 2006 full article needs subscription Amnesty International Report 2003 The Philippines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New People 27s Army amp oldid 1139991482, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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