Yap, who left for Oslo yesterday, said the five-day "backdoor" negotiations with leaders of the NDF, the political wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), are expected to jump-start formal talks meant to peacefully end the 34-year-old Maoist insurgency in the country.
Leading the government panel is former Justice Secretary Silvestre Bello III.
Two weeks before the backdoor talks, however, guerrillas of the New Peoples Army (NPA), the CPPs armed wing, staged at least two attacks on government positions in this province.
The first rebel assault was carried out in Barangay Lubigan in the upland town of San Jose, where the insurgents commandeered three dump trucks of the provincial government and used them to raid the villages police outpost then being manned by only two police officers. A civilian was wounded by a stray bullet during a brief gunfight.
In the second attack, the NPA tried but failed to overrun a detachment of the Armys 69th Infantry Battalion in Barangay Maamot, also San Jose town.
It was early last October when the government panel started holding backdoor talks with Jose Ma. Sison, the CPPs founding chairman, and Luis Jalandoni, head of the NDF peace panel.
President Arroyo suspended the peace process in mid-2001 after the NPA assassinated Reps. Rodolfo Aguinaldo of Cagayan and Marcial Punzalan of Quezon. Benjie Villa