Wednesday, December 12, 2012

GPH, MILF start 34th round of peace talks

From Rappler (Dec 12): GPH, MILF start 34th round of peace talks

The government of the Philippines (GPH) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), along with their respective Technical Working Groups, reconvened for the 34th Round for Formal Exploratory Talks in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Wednesday morning, December 12, to draft the annexes that will complement the recently-signed Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro.  This marks the first time that University of the Philippines Professor Miriam Coronel-Ferrer is taking the helm as the government peace panel chair after being appointed to replace now Associate Justice Marvic Leonen.
 
"We have returned confident of the wide public support back home for a process that has concluded one phase and began another," Ferrer said in her opening statement. MILF chief negotiator Mohagher Igbal for his part expressed confidence on Ferrer's capacity to lead the government peace panel. National Commission on Muslim Filipinos chair Mehol Sadain joined the team for this round of talks while the appointment of the 5th member of the panel is still awaiting the go signal from MalacaƱang.
 
Annexes
 
Both sides will continue working on the three annexes -- normalization, power-sharing and wealth-sharing -- that will comprise the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro. The annexes are expected to be completed before the end of the year as indicated in the Framework Agreement signed in October. Igbal earlier said this round of negotiations will cover a "substantial part" of the normalization annex, which is seen to be the most difficult part of negotiations as it covers the issues of policing, decommissioning, and gradual redeployment of government forces.
 
Despite fears and uncertainties surrounding the issue of normalization, Ferrer lauded the MILF for having the "courage and maturity" to understand what it takes to achieve peace.  "This courage and maturity, government will meet with reciprocity. Our processes may be bogged down sometimes by the bureaucratic maze that involves any paper work or the system of check-and-balance that are imposed on us and with due diligence, that we also impose on ourselves," Ferrer said. "But we should not be discouraged by seeming insurmountables," she added. "Among Tausugs, there is a saying: “In maksud mahunit, makawa landu in halga.” As translated by [Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process] Undersectary Joe Lorena, “Ang bagay na kinuha ng mahirap, marami ang makikinabang.” In English, from something achieved the hard way, many will benefit." .......
 

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