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Philippine Communist Party founder Sison dies at 83, self-exiled leader was on US terrorist list

  • Jose Maria Sison was the founder of the Philippine Communist Party, whose military wing – the NPA – has been waging a long-running armed rebellion
  • The self-exiled leader lived in Europe from the 1980s after release from jail following the fall of dictator Ferdinand Marcos – he was on US terrorist list

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Jose Maria Sison, founder of the Philippine Communist Party, has died aged 83. Photo: Reuters

Philippine communist leader Jose Maria Sison died on Friday night at the age of 83 after a two-week confinement in a hospital in the Netherlands, his party said on Saturday.

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Sison was the founder of the Philippine Communist Party, whose military wing – the New People’s Army (NPA) – has been waging an armed rebellion in one of the world’s longest-running insurgencies. The conflict between the NPA and the Philippine government has killed more than 40,000 people.

“The Filipino proletariat and toiling people grieve the death of their teacher and guiding light,” the party said in a statement on its website.

The self-exiled communist leader has lived in Europe since the late 1980s, after his release from jail following the fall of dictator Ferdinand Marcos, whose namesake son was elected president in a May election this year.

Sison was put on a US terrorist list in 2002, preventing him from travelling.

The party said Sison died peacefully at around 8.40pm on Friday after being confined in hospital in Utrecht. There was no reason given for his confinement.

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