In light of the concerns of critics on the legality of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB), Government of the Philippines (GPH) Legal Team head Atty. Anna Tarhata Basman affirmed that the Philippine Constitution has been the paramount basis of the CAB which is now translated into a draft Bangsamoro Basic Law that will be submitted to Congress for passage this year.
"The CAB is legal," Basman said while reiterating
that the GPH Peace Panel welcomes the concerns of everyone on the CAB. "We
are open to engaging and informing everyone on the different provisions on the
CAB."
Constitutional basis
According to Basman, Article X of the Philippine
Constitution, which contains provisions on autonomous regions served as the
basis for the Bangsamoro's ministerial form of government. “The general
guideline it provided for the structure of government of an autonomous region
is that the executive and legislative branch of the autonomous government must
be elective and representative of the constituent political units."
She said that the republican form of government is
entrenched in the Constitution. However, the exact form and mechanism to derive
citizen’s representation in the government is not specifically prescribed in
the Supreme Law and so it does not exclude other structures of representative
democracy.
On the devolution of powers to the Bangsamoro, Basman said
that “Section 20 of Article X is the constitutional basis for the listing of
devolved powers.” She added that the signed CAB, which lists such power-sharing
arrangements between the Central and Bangsamoro governments, has yet to be
fleshed out in the Basic Law that will undergo national legislation. “It is
therefore up to Congress to determine the extent of the legislative powers to be
granted to the Bangsamoro legislative body and the relationship of this power
vis-à-vis existing and future national legislations.”
As to the retention of the President’s general supervision
over autonomous regions, Atty. Basman said this will continue in the Bangsamoro
which respects the power of the national government and national sovereignty.
She said that like what has been exercised by the current Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), the future Bangsamoro government that will replace it will
also have devolved powers to regulate its constituent Local Government Units
(LGUs).
Basman also assured that the CAB respects the powers of
constitutional bodies. She cited excerpts of the CAB that gives “due regard to
the powers of the Supreme Court,” “without prejudice to the power, authority
and duty of the national Commission on Audit,” and its continued mandate in
autonomous regions like the future Bangsamoro.
Basman likewise clarified that the police force for the
Bangsamoro will be under the National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM) as required
by the Constitution. “Also, having a human rights body specifically catering to
the Bangsamoro will not diminish the current powers of the national Commission
on Human Rights (CHR) as in fact this arrangement already exists in the form of
the Regional Human Rights Commission in the ARMM.”
On the creation of autonomous regions in the country, Atty.
Basman underscored that “our Constitution itself provides the justification for
the asymmetry and reserved a separate set of provisions for two particular
areas in the country – Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras .”
“This progressive and enlightened section recognizes the
uniqueness of the peoples belonging to these areas and provides for their
rightful exercise of self-governance. The Bangsamoro Basic Law as the enabling
law for the establishment of the Bangsamoro precisely aims to operationalize
this constitutional objective,” she said.
Meanwhile, lawmakers such as Cagayan de Oro Representative
Rufus Rodriguez and Magdalo Party-List Representative Francisco Ashley
"Ace" Acedillo also affirmed the constitutionality of the CAB during
a weekly press briefing held at the House of Representatives. Rep. Rodriguez
reiterated that the CAB only provides for enhanced autonomy, negating claims
that it creates an independent state.
On her part, GPH Peace Panel Chair Prof. Miriam Coronel
Ferrer, in her recent public speech, said that independence was never an agenda
in the negotiations. Atty. Basman also said that the creation of Bangsamoro as
a sub-political unit of the Philippine state that respects its territorial
integrity and national sovereignty, is far from being a prelude to an
independent state. “The Bangsamoro is therefore within the frame of our 1987
Constitution.” (OPAPP)
http://news.pia.gov.ph/index.php?article=1751400425644
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