Yesterday,
April 27, the Peace Council created by President Benigno Aquino IIl to study
and review the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) submitted its report to the
House Ad Hoc Committee on BBL chair Rep. Rufuz Rodriguez of Cagayan De Oro
City.
Father
Joel Tabora, President of the Ateneo De Davao University who represented Manila
Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle, said that the bill was “overwhelmingly
acceptable” but needs some little refinements.
“Over-all,
we agree that the BBL is overwhelmingly acceptable, and deserves the support of
all Filipinos… To set it aside now would be wasteful of previous efforts… There
is enough good will on both sides to bring this agreement to its conclusion,”
Tabora said.
Council
member former Chief Justice Hilario Davide said the bill was compliant with the
constitutional provision that allows autonomous regions in the country.
“The
Bangsamoro Government, as constituted in the BBL, is compliant with the
requirements of the Constitution,” Davide said.
He added
that the establishment of a Bangsamoro government does not mean it is superior
to the central government, or that the central government is a weaker state.
The bill
also does not make another form of nationality in the country, he added.
“There are
several objections to BBL provisions on ‘people’, ‘territory’, and
‘self-determination,’ because of the fear of an intended or unwitting creation
or recognition of a separate Bangsamoro state. The Cluster finds that there is
no basis for such fear,” Davide said.
“The grant
of exclusive powers to the Bangsamoro Government is not tantamount to a
superior Bangsamoro Government or a weakened Central Government. It only refers
to powers that are devolved to the Bangsamoro Government, which remains under
the Central Government, but as an autonomous region,” Davide said.
Davide also
said there was nothing unconstitutional about the block grant to the Bangsamoro
government, saying it is merely part of the region’s share in the internal
revenue allotment or the local government unit’s share to national revenue.
He said the
block grant is not similar to the defunct Priority Development Assistance Funds
(PDAF) that was struck down as unconstitutional following a corruption scandal.
The grant,
equivalent to four percent of the net national internal revenue collection sans
the internal revenue allotment (IRA), is an automatic appropriation for the
Bangsamoro meant to help the newly created entity financially until it is
capable of standing on its own feet.
“As regards
the fiscal autonomy provisions, we do not find any constitutional infirmity in
the provisions of the BBL. The block grant is not akin to the PDAF that was
declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. The block grant referred to in
the BBL is similar to the Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) under the Local
Government Code,” Davide said.
Also, the
creation of the Bangsamoro Human Rights Commission, Bangsamoro Auditing Body,
Bangsamoro Civil Service Office, and Bangsamoro Electoral Office are not
unconstitutional for interfering to the functions of the existing
constitutional bodies, Davide said.
David said
these bodies only seek to “supplement” not supplant, the existing
constitutional bodies.
“The way
that the BBL is structured would show that the powers exercised by the
Bangsamoro special bodies are not exclusive powers but concurrent powers meant
to be exercised in a coordinative and complementary manner with the National
Constitutional Bodies, and without prejudice to the constitutional bodies’
exercise of their respective mandates and powers under the Constitution” Davide
said.
However, he
asked Congress to delete the provision allowing contiguous areas to be part of
the Bangsamoro territory with a petition of 10 percent of registered voters.
Davide said
the provision takes away from Congress its mandate in the creation of
territorial regions upon a plebiscite.
“As regards
the opt-in provisions of ‘contiguous territories’, the core Bangsamoro
territories should not be allowed to increase indefinitely by the periodic vote
of 10% of registered voters in the outer territories. The establishment of a
plebiscite that fixes the territory is a Congressional prerogative that cannot
be delegated. A perpetual opt-in provision makes the Bangsamoro territory
indefinite and keeps the organic act in constant flux,” Davide said.
The Peace
Council is composed of Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle, former
Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr., Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, Howard Dee and
Muslim Princess Bai Rohaniza Sumndad-Usman.
http://www.luwaran.com/index.php/welcome/item/911-peace-council-submits-report-to-house-bbl-overwhelmingly-constitutional
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