Moro (Islamic) Liberation Front (MILF) rebels stand guard near a Barrett sniper rifle along a road at Camp Darapanan rebel base in Maguindanao province, in the southern Philippines March 12, 2015. REUTERS/Erik De Castro
CAMP DARAPANAN, Philippines, March 14 (Reuters) - The trust that the largest Muslim guerrilla group in the Philippines has in the government has been eroded by a clash in January in which 44 police commandos and 18 rebels were killed, a rebel leader told Reuters in an interview this week.
The violence has throw into
doubt a peace process aimed at ending a 45-year conflict that has killed
120,000 people, displaced 2 million and stunted growth in the resource-rich
south of the largely Christian Philippines.
Public outrage over the
killing of the policemen and questions surrounding President Benigno Aqunio's
handling of the issue have blow up into his biggest political crisis.
"Trust has been
affected," Al Haj Ebrahim Murad, chairman of the Moro Islamic Liberation
Front (MILF) guerrilla group, told Reuters in an interview at his base on
Mindano island.
"We are studying to see
if the approval of the police operation came from the highest level of
government."
The Jan. 25 clash erupted
when police tried to infiltrate into a rebel area to capture Zulkifli bin Hir,
an al Qaeda-linked Malaysian bomb-maker with a $5 million U.S. bounty on
his head.
The government said at the
time the incident was a mistake and Aquino appealed for the peace process to
remain on track but legislators working out an autonomy deal upon which peace
hinges have stopped their work.
Police said in a report on
Friday that Aquino had approved the mission. Aquino has said he was given wrong
information and misled.
Murad did not say what the
MILF will do if Aquino was found liable for the police mission but said it was
a violation of the ceasefire.
A civil engineer by training,
Murad said he met Aquino on Jan. 13 to raise concern about the delays to the
autonomy law in Congress but he was not informed about the operation to get the
militant.
"Based on our findings,
it was not a mistaken encounter," he said, adding the police saw his group
as an enemy.
"They attacked our
community and our forces."
But he said the rebels were
committed to the peace process and would work with a new government if the
talks went beyond the end of Aquino's term, in June 2016.
"The president's
political capital is dwindling and there's a possibility the (autonomy law)
will not be passed on time," Murad said as uniformed guerrillas stood
guard.
"The next president,
whoever is elected next year, is bound to implement the peace agreement."
But he warned that the MILF
would not accept watered down autonomy. Aquino and his allies in Congress hope
the autonomy law will be passed by June.
http://www.trust.org/item/20150314044730-sghcp/?source=gep
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