REVIEW. The Philippine government and the Moro National Liberation Front has set the agenda for the ministerial-level tripartite meeting to be held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by OPAPP)
The Philippine
government and the Moro National Liberation Front set the agenda of the
forthcoming ministerial level tripartite meeting in Jeddah , Saudi Arabia .
For the upcoming
meeting proposed to be held in November, both the government and the MNLF agreed
to revisit agreements on key implementing measures of the 1996 peace pact,
signed by former President Fidel V. Ramos and the MNLF.
This peace accord
resulted in the expansion of areas covered
by the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), the integration of MNLF
members into the Armed Forces and the Philippine National Police, and the
establishment of transitory mechanisms and special agencies for the development
of Mindanao .
According to the
Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process, here are the
agreements to be reviewed in the upcoming ministerial level tripartite meeting:
1. The
Bangsamoro Development Assistance Fund (BDAF), which aims to address the
socio-economic issues and needs of the Bangsamoro People. Both the government
and the MNLF agreed to follow-up the terms of reference of BDAF with the
Islamic Development Bank (IDB
2. Tripartite
Implementation and Monitoring Committee, which aims to monitor the
implementation of all agreements of the Tripartite Implementation Process.
3. The co-management of strategic minerals in the region.
3. The co-management of strategic minerals in the region.
During the
two-day conference in Makati
City on September 7 and
8, the two parties also presented their views on the merging of all previous
peace accords and expansion of areas covered by the autonomous region.
The government
insisted that all gains of the 1976 and 1996 peace agreements with the MNLF and
the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) with the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front “are preserved” in the pending Bangsamoro Basic Law. (READ: MNLF, sultans want out of Bangsamoro)
However, the MNLF
maintains the government has yet to fully implement both peace agreements.
There are efforts
from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, an influential body among Muslim
countries, to unite the MILF and the MNLF. The OIC is also the third-party
facilitator of the GPH-MNLF peace deal, through its Peace Committee of the Southern Philippines (OIC-PCSP).
In a bid to
address the grievances of the MNLF, the MILF incorporated aspects of the 1996
peace pact that the MNLF still wants to be implemented in the BBL. These
provisions are known as the "42 consensus points."
http://www.rappler.com/nation/105735-philippines-mnlf-agenda-ministerial-tripartite-meeting
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