The Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) central committee
believes the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) is the best tool to end the
43-year agonizing conflict and eventually attain peace with justice in the
Bangsamoro territories.
”The BBL based on the CAB (Comprehensive Agreement on the
Bangsamoro) is our best chance to attain peace with justice and to build a
truly genuine autonomy in the Bangsamoro territories,” MNLF central committee
chairman Datu Abul Khayra D. Alonto said in the Senate hearing on the BBL on
Monday.
Alonto said the people of Mindanao are tired of war that has
claimed 200,000 lives, rendered two million homeless and destitute and forced
three million to see refuge in the Middle East, Asia
and elsewhere for the last 43 years.
”We no longer want to fall prey to the divide-and-rule
tactics used on the peoples of Mindanao; we now stand together with the MILF as
one, for the immediate passage of the BBL based on the CAB,” Alonto said.
He urged the Congress that instead of utilizing hundreds of
millions of pesos to keep the war machines in Mindanao
and Sulu, the money should be used for livelihood and education programs to
address poverty in the region.
Alonto also called for an end to the colonial policy that
the Philippine government inherited from its foreign masters.
”Until you put an end to the colonial policy, then, you
shall have before you the continuation of the Mindanao
war,” Alonto said.
”The Bangsamoro cause is beyond personalities, politics and
families. It is the conviction of the souls of the Bangsamoro people, and the
BBL passage addresses the historical and social injustices that gave rise to
the Mindanao war,” he added.
He also suggested to finally adopt the federal parliamentary
form of government, saying it is the best and only solution to the Bangsamoro
conflict.
”A federation can enhance national unity in diversity,
strengthen the mechanism of transparency and accountability in good governance,
and usher in a truly equitable development, progress and prosperity in the Philippines ,”
Alonto said.
Alonto said if the Philippine Congress will enact a BBL not
based on the CAB signed in March last year, “then we ask you not to waste the
money of the Philippine coffer.”
He said the MNLF stands in solidarity with the MILF in the
immediate passage of the BBL based on CAB.
During the hearing, former Rep. Gerry Salapuddin called for
end of war in Mindanao by passing a not
diluted BBL.
”Let us work for peace. Enough for war and the imperial Manila has more to gain if there will be peace in Mindanao ,” Salapuddin said.
The Bangsamoro foreign trained cadre officers from western Mindanao also expressed fully support for the passage of
the BBL.
”We deeply believe that the approval of the BBL by this
august chamber certainly fulfill the longed dreams and aspiration of the
Bangsamoro,” the group stated in their position paper.
However, other MNLF faction groups, specifically the group
loyal to former MNLF chairman Nur Misuari as well as the MNLF-Islamic Command
Council under chairman Habib Mudjahab Hasim, decried the non-consultation of
the BBL.
”The MNLF senior leaders are not happy with the BBL,” Edmund
Gumbahali, head of the national secretariat of Misuari’s group.
MNLF-ICC group chairman Habib Mudjahab Hashim opposed the
passage of the BBL since it would abolish the existing Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) and to be replaced by the Bangsamoro government.
”Congress cannot abolish ARMM without amending the
Constitution. The abrogation of the ARMM law is the abrogation of the 1976 Tripoli and 1996 Jakarta
Agreements between government and MNLF,” Hashim said.
Senator Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr., chairman of the
Senate committee on local government, thanked the MNLF leaders for sharing
their thoughts on the proposed BBL.
Marcos said his committee will conduct one or two more
hearings for the Sultanates and indigenous peoples as well as local executives,
particularly in the areas which will be covered by the Bangsamoro political
entity.
Marcos said the Senate has to scrutinize carefully the BBL
to make sure it will address the root cause of the long decades of war and
poverty in Mindanao .
”I cannot understand why we have to rush this important
piece of legislation. I’m asking them (the government) why we have to rush it.
I think the June 11 is a political deadline,” Marcos said.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=762840
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