MNLF, MILF chairmen sign communique aimed at ‘harmonizing’ separate peace overtures with gov’t of President-elect Duterte
File photo
Leaders of two former Muslim rebel groups agreed Wednesday to promote a common roadmap for peace in the conflict-ridden southern
The chairman of the largest of three factions of the Moro
National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the chairman of its breakaway group, the
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) signed a joint communique aimed at
“harmonizing” their separate peace overtures with the government.
The Philippine Star quoted the MILF’s Al-Hajj Murad Ebrahim
as saying that both sides are open to working together on a single peace agenda
during the signing at the main MILF stronghold in Camp Darapanan
in Maguindanao province.
He rejected the argument that it would be difficult to
achieve peace in southern Mindanao island due
to factional divides between the indigenous Moro communities.
The MNLF’s Muslimin Sema expressed hope that Duterte, who is
set to become the country’s first president from the south upon his
inauguration Thursday, would focus on peacefully resolving the Moro issue.
He accused previous administrations of having failed to
comply with their obligations under peace deals with the Moro.
Sema’s MNLF faction has backed the MILF’s ongoing peace
process with the government, despite a faction under founding chairman Nur
Misuari considering the MILF’s 2014 peace deal with the government a betrayal
of an 1996 Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)-brokered agreement.
Misuari is currently a fugitive, eluding charges filed
against him and his men for a siege on the predominantly catholic city of Zamboanga in September
2013, in which around 300 people were killed and thousands of houses razed.
The 2014 deal would have been sealed by a proposed autonomy
legislation, but the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) stalled in Congress earlier
this year, as it adjourned for campaigning for the May 9 election.
“There was no implementation `in letter and spirit’ of the
1976 Tripoli Agreement, the Jeddah Accord and the 1996 Final Peace Agreement
between the government and the MNLF,” Sema said Wednesday.
He underlined that some MNLF members are anxious about the
fate of the BBL negotiated by the MILF, since the outgoing government had
assured that all 42 consensus points reached in a tripartite review of the
MNLF’s 1996 agreement had been integrated into the proposed legislation.
“Now we have to join ranks for the sake of `harmonizing’ our
separate peace tracts for us to achieve a durable kind of peace that is for all
people in Mindanao , for all people in the
Bangsamoro,” the Star quoted him saying. “The Bangsamoro is never indivisible
geographically and demographically.”
Meanwhile, Murad underlined that Duterte “is from Mindanao and has Maranaw blood” from one of the region’s
Moro tribes.
“He surely understands the Moro problem. We are grateful to
have a president from Mindanao for the first
time ever,” he said.
During his campaign, the tough talking Duterte, who served 2
years as mayor of Davao
City , had vowed to
"correct the historical injustice committed against the Moro.”
http://aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/muslim-ex-rebels-in-philippines-agree-on-common-roadmap/599974
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