Chairperson of the government peace panel, Professor Miriam
Coronel-Ferrer, on Monday clarified that members of the Moro Islamic Liberation
Front (MILF) will not be integrated into the Philippine National Police or the
Armed Forces of the Philippines ,
once the draft Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) is passed.
“Again, we would like to clarify, wala pong integration ng
MILF sa police force or sa Armed Forces of the Philippines, unlike in the peace
agreement with the MNLF, that is not there; and the MILF will not become the
police force for the Bangsamoro,” she said during a press briefing in
Malacañang.
At the briefing, Professor Ferrer urged the people to “go
back to the text” to correct wrong interpretations on the contents of the BBL.
“What we are stressing is go back to the text, go back to
the original source, kasi ‘pag ang lumalabas ay ang mga parang general
perceptions, then you miss out all of these very, very important provisions in
the draft law that basically repeats what is written in the Constitution or
upholds what are written in the Constitution and effectively delimits the
powers of the Bangsamoro government,” she pointed out.
On the supposed creation of a Commission on Audit under the
Bangsamoro government, she cited that according to Article 5, Section 2 of the
BBL, the body that will be created in terms of performing some auditing
functions in the Bangsamoro shall not in any way prejudice the powers,
authority and duty of the national COA.
“What probably has created a lot of confusion is to call
that body a Bangsamoro Commission on Audit. So if the idea is to allow for an
internal audit system that is within the Bangsamoro government, perhaps, one of
the revisions or cleaning up that could be done is to remove any reference to
that particular name, which has created much of this confusion,” she explained.
Ferrer also denied that the Bangsamoro government will have
its own Commission on Elections, noting that the BBL’s Article 7, Section 9
refers to a Bangsamoro electoral office, which shall be part of the COMELEC.
“The only specialization that this COMELEC office in the
Bangsamoro will have, is in relation to the fact that it will have a different
kind of an electoral system,” she said.
On the Commission on Human Rights, Ferrer said the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) already has such a commission.
“So what is provided for here is that the Commission on
Human Rights in the Bangsamoro shall have a coordinative and complementary
relationship with the national Commission on Human Rights in carrying out its
mandate, which is exactly what we have now in the ARMM, and that has been
facilitated by a memorandum of agreement between the national Commission on
Human Rights and the newly created the two- or three-year-old ARMM Commission
on Human Rights,” she said.
“Maybe what is a little bit controversial here is that in
the proposed law, there is this provision that provides for prosecutorial
powers for the Bangsamoro Commission on Human Rights, which the current
National Commission on Human Rights does not have,” she added.
Amid the confusion, Ferrer said she hopes that Congress
would be able to provide a better version of the BBL.
“We are not saying that the way the law is drafted now is
the best language already that there is, and we look up to the wisdom of
Congress to be able to come up with a much better language, precisely to be
able to avoid these kinds of misinterpretation,” Ferrer said.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=749204
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