From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Aug 22): PH gov’t, MILF open 39th round of talks for peace pact, unfazed by
bombings
Miriam Coronel-Ferrer, government peace panel chair, listens to Mohagher Iqbal,
MILF Peace Panel Chair during the ceremonial opening of the first meeting of the
transition commission which is tasked to draft the basic law of the Bangsamoro
entity in Crowne Plaza,Ortigas, Pasig. INQUIRER PHOTO/RAFFY LERMA
The Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front began their
39th round of talks Thursday, confident they could leap towards completing a
comprehensive agreement within the year and overcome the threats of peace
spoilers.
In her opening statement, chief government negotiator Miriam Coronel-Ferrer
noted that amid the breakthrough on wealth-sharing last July 13, there have been
forces trying to bring the peace process down.
“…We know that the path we have painstakingly taken to get us to the second,
third and then the final Annex is strewn with various types of landmines,”
Coronel-Ferrer said.
She said the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) have been on “a
rampage, attacking soldiers and setting off grenades and IEDs (improvised
explosive devices) in several parts of Central Mindanao, in their bid to derail
our negotiations.”
The incidents happened as the 38th meeting was going on in Kuala Lumpur for
the Annex on Revenue Generation and Wealth-Sharing.
“On July 26 – a week after our return from Kuala Lumpur – in Cagayan de Oro,
insidious forces detonated a bomb that killed six and injured more than 40
civilians. Then on August 5, a car bomb set off on a busy road in Cotabato
killed eight and injured scores of people, among them young children,”
Coronel-Ferrer said.
“In this round, we will prove that we have not been waylaid by these groups’
destructive, desperate ways,” Coronel-Ferrer stressed.
Earlier, she called on the peoples of Mindanao to “rage against the
violence.”
Coronel-Ferrer’s determined words was complemented by MILF chief negotiator
Mohagher Iqbal’s optimism for yet another breakthrough in the current round of
talks.
“Frankly speaking, I am seeing a ray of hope that the Annex on Power-sharing
will be settled and signed by the parties during this meeting. I see no clear
reasons why this should be delayed any longer since it has been the subject of
negotiation more than a year ago,” Iqbal said in his opening address.
“Once this annex is settled, we can pour all our remaining stamina on
normalization, an issue that is not too difficult to overcome by willing and
committed peace partners. After all, the end state that we all desire in this
peace process is for peace, justice, and development to reign in our lands,” he
added.
Many residents feel unsafe in public places in Mindanao weeks after the
bombings.
After the series of blasts, police and military personnel have been manning
busy ports, malls, and strategic street corners in the island’s major cities.
“Bombings, sniping, and various forms of indiscriminate attacks on civilian
populations and objects such as bridges have no place in the moral order that we
are instituting in our country and our communities,” said Coronel-Ferrer.
She assured that the various mechanisms and institutions of the peace process
like the ceasefire committees and the International Monitoring Team, the police
and military, as well as local officials “are working hard to address the
continuing threats to our people’s collective security.”
The recent declaration of independence by Moro National Liberation Front
(MNLF) founding chair Nur Misuari has added to worries that Mindanao’s security
situation is bound to worsen and could imperil the upcoming Bangsamoro
transition.
“We know that there will be more challenges ahead, that in fact, things might
still get worse before things get better. Such has been the experience in most
post-conflict settings,” Coronel-Ferrer said.
“This is my objective view, not a pessimistic stance. But it is an appraisal
that is imbued with the determination that we shall overcome,” she added.
Iqbal said the apparent “conspiracy of all these anti-peace forces” could be
“nipped in the bud” through the completion of a comprehensive peace agreement.
“Once the agreement is sealed, it would be very difficult for them to destroy
it,” Iqbal added.
Once the Bangsamoro government is fully entrenched and functional, “the
problems that we are encountering now will gradually be eased out and those
still opposing or fighting the government will be deprived of legitimacy and of
popular support,” according to Iqbal.
“Take away the water, the fish will die,” Iqbal pointed out, quoting a
Chinese verse.
“On our end, we do our share of reaching the goal of completing the last two
remaining annexes. Let us show that we are ready to put to sleep the infamous
devil in the details and awaken the angel of creativity and compromise,”
Coronel-Ferrer said.
She emphasized that even as the government has been dealing with the MILF in
the negotiating table, “we are insuring that the process and the outcome will be
for all stakeholders, so long as they choose peace and commit to meaningful
reform beyond one’s personal or group interest.”
“We aim for an agreement that leaves no one in the prospective Bangsamoro
political entity left behind as far as protection of rights and access to power
and wealth are concerned,” she said.
“To be sustained, our agreement must redound to the well-being of not just
one but of all the indigenous peoples in the Bangsamoro; not of one political or
socio-cultural or religious group but of everyone; not just of men but also of
women; not just of the elites but most especially of the poor and dispossessed
across the spectrum,” she added.
During the opening rites, the peace panels welcomed observers from Congress,
namely, Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus Rodriguez and Lanao del Sur Rep. Pangalian
Balindong. North Cotabato Rep. Jesus Sacdalan was expected to join them.
Members of the Transition Commission (TransCom) who have been drafting the
Bangsamoro Basic Law also came for the opening ceremonies.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/472283/ph-govt-milf-open-39th-round-of-talks-for-peace-pact-unfazed-by-bombings
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