From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jan 19): An encounter for peace in Al-Barka
MEMBERS of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the Philippine Army’s
103rd Brigade test their strengths in a game of tug-of-war in October last year
to celebrate the formal signing of the framework peace agreement between the
government and MILF negotiators in Malacañang. RICHEL V. UMEL
The last time they met, heads rolled as blood flowed in what was seen as one of
the most grossly lopsided encounters between soldiers and Moro rebels in
Basilan.
On Jan. 4, pleasantries, not bullets, were exchanged in Al-Barka town. The
erstwhile protagonists shared food and coffee in a meeting arranged by the
Malaysian-led International Monitoring Team (IMT), which was overseeing the
ceasefire between the military and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
Lead peace negotiators of the government and the MILF signed in Manila in
October last year a historic framework agreement on the Bangsamoro toward ending
the decades-long Moro insurgency in Mindanao. Many of the rebels who came to Barangay Magkawa in Al-Barka, like Dan Asnawi
and Hud Limaya, have been wanted by the law for their supposed roles in the
deaths of 42 government troopers in 2007 and 2011.
Beheaded
Fourteen of the soldiers were beheaded. The military has filed murder charges against Asnawi and Limaya for their
alleged roles in the deaths of 19 soldiers and officers on Oct. 18, 2011, and
the deaths of 23 Marine soldiers on July 10, 2007.
Col. Carlito Galvez, commander of the Basilan-based 104th Infantry Brigade
of the Philippine Army, said the Al-Barka meeting was born out of a short
notice. “It was actually not part of our scheduled activities. A member of the IMT
suggested to us to make a surprise visit to the [MILF] camp there. We agreed and
we went there without any fanfare,” Galvez told the Inquirer by phone.
TWO MONTHS after the signing of the peace agreement, gestures of reconciliation
abound between Moro guerrillas and government soldiers. Col. Carlito Galvez,
head of the 104th Army Brigade, embraces Dan Laksaw Asnawi, head of a Moro
Islamic Liberation Front command. JULIE S. ALIPALA
Aware of past military debacles in the town’s jungles, Galvez said he agreed
to meet with the MILF leaders, including Asnawi and Limaya, because “if we want
to achieve genuine peace with the rebels, we must start somewhere, and this is
an opportunity we cannot easily ignore.”
Peace-building
Maj. Franco Alano, acting spokesperson of the Western Mindanao Command based
in Zamboanga City, said the meeting was part of the series of dialogues tied to
the signing of the framework accord. Families of soldiers who died in the 2007 and 2011 attacks in Al-Barka might
resent the meeting, Alano said, but he stressed that the “healing process is a
must, and we need to make them understand.” Striking peace was also important for the military, he said.
While the cases and the arrest warrants against Asnawi and Limaya are still
live, Alano said “legal actions are beyond the AFP now.” “We are doing this as part of the confidence-building measures and to
facilitate and increase coordination between our tactical units so that
development programs will flourish in Al-Barka, with the help of the Japanese
government,” Galvez said.
Abdurasad Sirajan, MILF action officer of Ad Hoc Joint Action Group for
Western Mindanao, described the meeting “as historical and very festive.” “It was the first time in the history of Basilan for military commanders from
both sides to come face-to-face, embrace each other, share food served on banana
leaves and dreams for Basilan,” Sirajan said.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/343293/an-encounter-for-peace-in-al-barka
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