MNLF chairman Datu Abul Khayr Alonto calls on President Aquino to flex his political muscle: If he wanted to, Aquino can muster the numbers in both the Senate and the House of Representatives
FINAL PUSH. Ambassador Datu Abul Khayr Alonto (left), chairman of the Moro National Liberation Front, says in Marawi City on April 27, 2015, that passing the Bangsamoro Basic Law is the final step toward peace in Mindanao. Photo by Bobby Lagsa, Rappler
LANAO DEL SUR, Philippines – The leadership of the Moro
National Liberation Front (MNLF) – its chairman Ambassador Datu Abul Khayr
Alonto and its cental committee – declared their support for the proposed
Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), in assembly of thousands on Monday, April 27, in Marawi City
here.
Some groups
within the MNLF had been reportedly against the BBL, which would create a
Muslim region that is more powerful than the current Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao, which was the product of an earlier government peace agreement
with the MNLF.
The transition
from the MNLF to the Bangsamoro will be presided by another group, the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
On Monday,
thousands of Bangsamoro people held a peace walk and rally at the Banggolo Plaza in Marawi to acknowledge the peace
efforts of the government and the MILF.
Joining the rally
were surviving original MNLF fighters, known in the late 1960s and the 1970s as
the black shirts; emissaries and representatives of the MILF; the government peace
panel; and the International Monitoring Team, headed by its current head of
mission Major General Dato’ Sheikh Mokhsin bin Sheikh Hassan of Malaysia.
Alonto said the
peace talks between the MILF and the government is the best so far and should
be supported as the people of Mindanao wanted
peace.
Alonto said the
Muslim people's search for the right to self determination in the last 42 years
had resulted to at least 200,000 deaths, rendered at least two million people
homeless and destitute, and 3 million scattered as refugees across the country,
in Malaysia, the Middle East, and elsewhere.
He called on the
Muslim people to exercise utmost patience as the BBL is now on its final phase.
“The signing of the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro (FAB) and the
Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) has declared that we, the
Bangsamoro, are finally home and dawn is about to come,” he told those who
joined the rally.
Alonto said the
MNLF and the MILF have set aside their differences and agreed to work together
after he and MILF chairman Al Haj Murad Ebrahim signed a communiqué for
cooperation at Camp
Darapanan on January 5,
2015. Both camps pledged to work hard for the immediate passage of the BBL and
to continually defend the Bangsamoro rights.
The MILF broke
away from the MNLF after the MNLF signed a peace agreement with the Philippine
Government in 1996 under President Fidel Ramos. In 2013, an MNLF faction led by
former chairman Nur Misuari, whom Alonto recruited in the early years of the
organization, attacked Zamboanga City in protest against the peace talks
between the government and the MNLF.
“The BBL is in
consonance with our (MNLF) goals, and the MNLF and MILF only has one purpose –
the rights of the Bangsamoro,” Alonto said.
“The GPH and the
MILF CAB is a continuum of the 1996 GRP-MNLF Peace Accord and the 1976 RP-MNLF
Tripoli Agreement anchored on Resolution Number 18 of the 1974 Kuala Lumpur
Summit of the Head of States of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation,”
Alonto added.
Alonto added that
all these agreements possess the character of an international treaty.
Alonto also
praised the present ceasefire agreement between the government and MILF as the
most effective ceasefire mechanism in the last 43 years.
Alonto called on
President Benigno Aquino to flex his political muscle to ensure the passage of
the BBL. If he wanted to, Aquino can muster the numbers in both the Senate and
the House of Representatives, Alonto said.
Alonto said that
if the BBL failed, the MNLF will seek shelter in international laws and treaty
and will prod the government to amend the Constitution to perfect the BBL. “We
won’t go back to another 17 years [of war], which is a price too great to pay.”
He said he trusts
that Senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr, chairman of the Senate committee on local
governments, will properly handle the deliberations on the BBL.
Meanwhile, the
International Monitoring Team Head of Mission Major General Dato Sheikh Mokhsin
Bin Sheikh Hassan said that he is happy with the progress in the peace process,
despite the setbacks caused by the Mamasapano incident.
“Overall, with
the ceasefire mechanisms in place, proper coordination between the Armed Forces
of Philippines, the National Police, and the MILF have prevented violent
confrontations,” Dato said. “Peace should be cherished by the Filipino people.”
http://www.rappler.com/nation/91410-mnlf-pass-bangsamoro-law
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