“The US will support the government of the Philippines as they go about the peace efforts –
specially we can help in the underpinning any agreement with economic
assistance and advises so that people can build on that peaceful resolution,”
United States Ambassador Philip Goldberg said in an interview from Zamboanga City .
“We are not part
of the talks but we what want to do is to support the peaceful resolution. We
will try to help, support the process, even though we are not part of it,”
Goldberg added.
The government
and the MILF expect to conclude on Sunday the disarmament (normalization) annex
and an additional agreement on Bangsamoro waters – the last two remaining
documents before a comprehensive peace agreement can be signed – during
the ongoing negotiations in Kuala
Lumpur that began yesterday.
Goldberg flew to
Mindanao to sign an agreement with local government officials of Zamboanga City , Basilan and Sulu for a good
governance program.
A faction of the
Moro National Liberation Front has already expressed willingness to start unity
talks with the MILF.
Muslimin Sema,
chairman of the MNLF Council, said his group is not opposed to the peace pact
between the government and the MILF, but he underscored the need to respect the
1996 final peace agreement between the government and the MNLF.
Sema said the
unity talks must be brokered by the influential 57-member Organization of
Islamic Cooperation.
“We are waiting
for the proposal from the OIC for the MNLF and the MILF to have a forum that
would discuss how the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro and the 1996
government-MNLF agreement can possibly be harmonized,” Sema added.
The government
earlier called on the MNLF to help in the Bangsamoro Basic Law that would pave
the way for the replacement of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.
“Peace
negotiations between the government and the MILF are coming to a close, with
the projected outcome being the enactment of a new law that will put in place
the Bangsamoro government with all its improved provisions for achieving a
strengthened autonomy in the region,” presidential peace adviser Teresita Deles
said.
“As has been
explained by the government and the MILF repeatedly, the BBL is not just for
the MILF but for the entire Bangsamoro people. We continue to hope that the
various MNLF leadership blocs will come around to seeing the value of engaging
themselves, together with other Bangsamoro stakeholders, in crafting the best
possible law for the Bangsamoro,” Deles added.
The OIC has
already called for a mechanism to ensure that the gains of the 1996 FPA are
“preserved” and that the Bangsamoro Basic Law will “integrate these gains.”
The basic law is
currently being crafted by a 15-man Bangsamoro Transition Commission.
MNLF founding
chairman Nur Misuari, who has gone into hiding after an arrest warrant was
issued against him over the Zamboanga siege in October, was earlier invited to
join the Transition Commission but he declined.
Once a
comprehensive peace pact is signed, the draft BBL will be submitted to Congress
and will be certified as urgent by the President.
Aquino earlier
said the target is to have the law passed at the latest by mid-2015, after
which a plebiscite will be held in the areas that will form part of the
Bangsamoro.
The President
said an interim authority must be in place for the Bangsamoro a year before the
2016 national elections.
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2014/01/25/peace-deal-key-to-more-us-aid-for-mindanao/
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