THE Philippine
government faces challenges implementing an accord aimed at ending decades of
conflict in resource-rich Mindanao , with the
risk of violence from Muslim rebel groups not included in the deal and private
armies in the area. (Related story on A3)
An independent
body will conduct a census of rebels, inventory their weapons and schedule the
phasing out of arms over the next two years, during which programs will be put
in place to help fighters move to civilian life, according to the agreement
signed Jan. 25 by the government and Moro Islamic Liberation Front in Kuala Lumpur .
Ending one of Southeast Asia ’s most entrenched conflicts could mark a
key legacy for President Benigno Aquino, with four decades of insurgency
killing as many as 200,000 people and stifling development of the southern
region. Still, implementing the accord is “easier said than done” given rival
rebel groups and private armies operating in the area, Rommel Banlaoi,
Executive Director of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and
Terrorism Research, said by phone.
“The annex on
normalization made a lot of promises. If they fail to deliver, that will create
unmet expectations and trigger more armed violence in Mindanao ,”
Banlaoi said.
Soldiers clashed
on Sunday and Monday with members of a splinter rebel group in the Mindanao
provinces of Maguindanao and North Cotabato ,
Colonel Dickson Hermoso, a spokesman for the Army’s 6th infantry division, said
by phone.
Soldiers fired
artillery rounds as they tried to arrest members of the Bangsamoro Islamic
Freedom Fighters, with several rebels wounded as they escaped, he said. No
government troops were injured. Growth Boost
Lasting peace
could bring investors to Mindanao and unlock
mineral deposits worth an estimated $300 billion, political analyst Richard
Javad Heydarian said.“It would unlock the natural resources and unleash the
human capital of one of the most promising but underdeveloped areas in Southeast Asia ,” said Heydarian, who lectures at Ateneo
de Manila University. “Given Mindanao ’s
substantial untapped economic assets, such integration will further boost the
Philippine economy.”
Standard
Chartered Plc economist Jeff Ng estimates a peace accord could boost Philippine
gross domestic product growth by as much as 0.3 percentage point. The
$250-billion Philippine economy expanded in 2013 by 7 percent, the fastest pace
in three years, according to the median estimate of economists before a report
due Jan. 30.
Private armies
will be disbanded, six rebel camps will become civilian communities and
criminal cases related to the Mindanao
conflict will be resolved through pardon and amnesty under the accord, the last
of four needed to complete a comprehensive agreement. The peace panels also
agreed on jurisdiction over waters to be included in Bangsamoro, the new
autonomous Muslim political entity targeted by 2016.
Private armies in
Mindanao are “well-entrenched, run by wild
oligarchs,” Banlaoi said. “It’s the responsibility of the Bangsamoro government
to tame the wild oligarchs.”
Three weeks of
fighting in Zamboanga city between government forces and a different Muslim
separatist group in September killed at least 203 people and delayed peace
talks.
“The MNLF has
demonstrated its capability to make trouble,” Banlaoi said, referring to the
Moro National Liberation Front headed by Nur Misuari, a former Autonomous
Region in Muslim Mindanao governor, which was involved in the Zamboanga
standoff. “It can undermine the peace dividends; it can spoil the whole process
and even hijack the agenda of the new Bangsamoro government.”
Disarmament will
start after the final agreement and be completed before May 2016, when the
first regional elections will be held at the same time as national polls,
Ghadzali Jaafar, the MILF’s vice chairman for political affairs, said by phone
yesterday. It will be gradual and “commensurate” with other steps, he said.
“There is no
problem with the MILF,” Jaafar said. “The apprehension will be on the
honest-to-goodness implementation of the comprehensive agreement by the
government.”
The incidence of
poverty across the ARMM -- a delineation created during a previous attempt at
peace -- climbed to 48.7 percent in 2012 from 39.9 percent in 2009, according
to a December report. The Philippine Statistics Authority defines poverty as
living on less than $1.20 a day.
The government
and Muslim rebels agreed on power-sharing last month, on wealth and revenue
sharing in July, and on transitional arrangements earlier in 2013.
Benito Lim, a
political science professor at Ateneo de Manila University, called the process
a short-term arrangement that doesn’t guarantee long-term peace.
An earlier
agreement signed with Misuari’s MNLF in 1996 collapsed partly because it
“failed to put post-conflict rebuilding mechanisms in place,” Teresita Deles,
Aquino’s peace adviser, said in an interview last July.
The Philippines
sought support from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to review the 1996
deal and merge it with the MILF agreements.
Aquino has asked
lawmakers to pass legislation this year creating Bangsamoro, setting the stage
for an autonomous Muslim region before his six-year term ends in 2016.
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2014/01/28/peace-deal-faces-testy-execution/
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