From InterAksyon (Sep 19): DAY 11 | 12th soldier killed, 15 more rebels surrender as fighting resumes in Zambo
Amid announcements from authorities that the situation has already started to normalize except in “constricted” areas where the remaining rebels are holding hostages to use as “humans shields,” a 12th soldier was killed as fighting resumed in Barangay Sta. Catalina, Zamboanga City.
In a related development, Deputy Director General Felipe Rojas Jr., operations chief of the Philippine National Police (PNP), said 15 more fighters of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) surrendered, 10 of them Wednesday night, the rest Thursday morning, in Sta. Catalina. This brought the number of captured or surrendered rebels to 108.
It is estimated that 200 followers of MNLF founding chairman Nur Misuari waged the “war for independence.
The military said sporadic fighting started at around 6 a.m. while soldiers were conducting house-to-house search during “clearing operations.” Soon after the fighting broke out, more structures were burning in areas where the operations were underway.
News of the new surrenders came shortly after the death of the soldier was confirmed.
The government led by the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) have already started to build a case against Misuari and his men, led by his trusted ground commander Habier Malik.
On Wednesday, Interior Secretary Manuel “Mar” Roxas II said a rebellion case against Misuari and his loyalists is “very much possible.”
For her part, Secretary Teresita Quintos-Deles of the Office the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) said Misuari and his loyalists may be charged for the “act of rebellion.”
Although she mentioned the word “terrorism,” Deles refrained from directly calling the Zamboanga siege an act of terrorism.
Misuari’s history
In 2001, Misuari led 600 rebels in the Cabatangan siege, also in Zamboanga, which resulted in the death of more than 100 people and the wounding of scores.
Misuari, then a governor of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), claimed the attack was meant to stop the ARMM elections because the national government did not “consult” him on the process. He was not seeking for reelection that time.
He fled to Malaysia to evade arrest and the government filed criminal charges against him. Also included in the charge-sheet were supposed leaders of the MNLF and Abu Sayyaf, namely Bakil Annay Harun, Johan Sawadjaan San Sanzibar, Akil Abdurahman Abdur, Addin Esquerra Ishmael, Gamar Bin Abd Razak, Omar Bin Abdullah, and Abu Harris Osman.
On 24 November 2001, the Malaysian police arrested Misuari and six followers on Pulau Jampiras in Malaysia's Sabah state. According to the Malaysian police, the place was suspected of having been used as an MNLF training camp.
On 7 January 2002, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahatir Mohamad ordered Misuari deported after six days in jail in Kuala Lumpur for illegal entry.
Misuari was able to haggle for a house arrest. In 2007, but the government ordered him arrested again on charges of terrorism. He was denied the petition for bail on the terrorism charge but the court granted his and his seven co-accused’s bail petition on the rebellion charge releasing them on bail at P100,000 each. Upon instruction of the Cabinet Security cluster, Misuari was allowed to post bail for his terrorism case on 25 April 2008.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/71046/day-11--twelfth-soldier-killed-as-fighting-resumes-in-zambo
It was the place where he uttered the famous phrase "alea iacta est" – the die is cast.
We are not saying Misuari is already downed. If there is a way, frankly speaking, we do not want that to happen. But his declaration of independence and ordering the assault of Zamboanga City is a wild move that can cause him great trouble, perhaps a gradual slipping into oblivion. The ill-effects are surely reaching him by now. More seriously, the moral legitimacy of his leadership is seriously doubted now. We don’t think the destruction, killings, abuses, and rapes (if true) that came with the siege can be easily forgotten and ignored. In fairness, his forces might not have committed all of those excesses, but in war, the losers usually got all the blames and curses. The victors dictate how the narratives of the war are written.
For one, the siege had effectively revived the old wounds of Moro-Christian animosities that are more alive in Zamboanga City than elsewhere where many if not most of the non-Muslim leaders are hostile to the cause of the MNLF and even of the MILF. There is hardly any distinction drawn between the two. They are more often lumped together.
The Zamboanga tragedy is not an act of brinkmanship, which great leaders often do, but rather in summary a blunder. The approach was reminiscent of 1970s model whereby no civilized rules of engagement were recognized by both government and insurgent forces. Anything that moved was a legitimate target. But today we are living in a more civilized world where there is clear and written norm of engagement which no one can disregard. We have to abide by it or the world will pound on us. We can see what happened to Pol Pot of Cambodia and President Slobodan Milosevic of Yugoslavia, among others, how they were tried and brought to the bar of international justice. They were both shamed and cursed. We do not want that to happen to Misuari, who is considered father of the MNLF, which all of the senior leaders of the MILF were part of.
We do not know whether Misuari had ever thought of the negative impacts of his order. Obviously, he effectively forgot the doctrine of people’s war whereby the people’s interests and safety are central to every planning and activities pursued by a revolutionary organization. “Serve the people wholeheartedly” says the doctrine.
The extent of the damage of the siege would also seriously impact on the government, as well. Very surely, President Benigno Aquino III is encountering great difficulty in figuring out the better policy option he would adopt: File a case and arrest Misuari, sanitize him from any guilt of the siege and continue dealing with him, or launch military actions against him and his remaining loyal forces. None of the three options yield clear advantage to the government. All are laden with serious negative consequences. Perhaps, the best option is to choose the lesser evil. Or better still, look for the best option, which we are not sure there is any available.
Similarly, even the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) which supported Misuari through thick and thin for decades is surely taken aback by the debacle in Zamboanga City. They too have to do due diligence and soul-searching. Frankly, we do not know how they handle this kind of situation. We pray for their guidance!
http://www.luwaran.com/index.php/editorial/item/559-‘crossing-the-rubicon’