Aquino says he can still secure a peace deal with Muslim rebels before standing down next year after a botched anti-terror raid nearly derailed the process
COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. President Benigno S. Aquino III walks among troops upon arrival at the Dambana ng Kagitingan in Pilar, Bataan for the 73rd Commemoration of the Day of Valor on April 09, 2015. Photo by Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau
President Benigno Aquino said Tuesday, April 14, that he could still secure a peace deal with Muslim rebels before standing down next year, after a botched anti-terror raid nearly derailed the process.
The Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF), the Philippines '
biggest Muslim rebel group, signed a peace pact last year aiming to end their
four-decade separatist struggle that has claimed an estimated 120,000 lives.
But efforts by
the Aquino administration to pass a law authorising an autonomous region for
the nation's Muslim minority -- the key part of the pact – were delayed amid
outrage over a police raid in January targeting alleged top terrorists.
Malaysian
bomb-maker Zulkifli bin Hir, one of the United States ' most wanted men, was
killed in the raid. But 44 police commandos also died in an ensuing day-long
battle with MILF fighters and other rebels.
Asked in an
exclusive interview with AFP on Tuesday if the peace accord could be
implemented before he steps down in June next year, Aquino said: "Yes, I
believe so."
As outrage eased
over the deaths – the single biggest battlefield toll among security forces in
recent memory – the autonomy bill could be discussed "devoid of
emotion," he said.
"Perhaps
two, three weeks ago, a month ago they were saying it's dead in the
water," Aquino said.
"They're
back to discussing it. That's a very hopeful sign," Aquino said, referring
to debates in parliament that resumed this week after a three-month suspension.
Aquino repeated warnings that failure to implement the treaty could radicalize
the MILF's moderate base and cause further bloodshed in the southern Philippines .
"There is the very real danger that failing this, they (MILF leaders) will
lose the support of their rank and file, who will now listen to the more
radical voices within the organization," he said.
Government peace
negotiators hope parliament will pass the self-rule bill by mid-year.
Once it becomes
law, a plebiscite will be held in areas to be included in the autonomous region
that will be called Bangsamoro.
A transitional
government will hold office until the first set of regional officials are
elected in May next year, simultaneously with the national elections.
A peace deal to
end decades of fighting in the south would be a key legacy for Aquino, but he
said he was prepared for the possibility that it would not be fully implemented
under his term.
"If it's my
fate that I will not be able to shepherd my country towards having that peace
agreement... I hope I will be able to demonstrate the absurdity of going back
to the traditional way, which is violence always simmering or threatening to
boil over," he said.
The Philippine
constitution only allows presidents to serve a single term of six years.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/89905-aquino-muslim-peace-deal-milf
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