Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Duterte meets with Misuari after dropping federalism push

From the Business World (Jul 10, 2019): Duterte meets with Misuari after dropping federalism push


PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte on Tuesday met with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) Chairman Nur Misuari in Malacañang, which comes after his recent pronouncement that he will no longer push for federalism but at least an amendment in the Constitution. 

The meeting, their third this year, also took place after the President’s announcement that he wants Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol, who was also present at the meeting, transferred to the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDa) to serve as his point person in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM). 

Other officials who joined the President were his former special assistant and now Senator Christopher Lawrence T. Go, Executive Secretary Salvador S. Medialdea, and Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Carlito G. Galvez, Jr. 

Messrs. Medialdea, Go, and Mr. Piñol did not immediately respond when asked to provide details regarding the meeting. 

Sought for comment, University of Santo Tomas Political Science Professor Marlon M. Villarin said the President’s meeting with Mr. Misuari could be his way of making the MNLF leader feel included in his plans for Mindanao. 

“He wants to make an idea of inclusivity… We know very well that Mr. Misuari, even before, manifested his desire to be recognized and to participate if he’s given the chance,” Mr. Villarin explained. 

The BARMM, created under the Bangsamoro Organic Law, is a fruit of the peace deal between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. “So I think it’s one way of pacifying the possibility of Mr. Misuari feeling bad about being excluded,” he added.

https://www.bworldonline.com/duterte-meets-with-misuari-after-dropping-federalism-push/

MILF 'consistent' in supporting federalism, says Murad

From ABS-CBN (Jul 11, 2019): MILF 'consistent' in supporting federalism, says Murad

The Moro Islamic Liberation Front is "consistent" in its support federalism, which will strengthen the Bangsamoro autonomous region in the south, the group's leader said Thursday.

The chairman of the MILF, Murad Ebrahim, is also interim chief of the Bangsamoro, the expanded autonomous region that was established under a 2014 peace deal between Manila and the MILF.

"Consistent pa rin ang position namin, we are supportive of federalism kasi nakikta namin na once federalism is in place it would strengthen yung Bangsamoro. Dahil instead of autonomy then maaaring maging part of the federal arrangement," Murad told ANC's Early Edition (Our position is consistent, we are supportive of federalism because once federalism is in place, it would strengthen the Bangsamoro. Instead of autonomy, it can be part of the federal arrangement.)


President Rodrigo Duterte, the first chief executive from Mindanao, is pushing for federalism to spread political power and government resources that have long been held in the capital, Manila.

A charter-writing body drafted a federal constitution in 2018.

On Tuesday, Duterte met in Malacañang with Nur Misuari, founding chairman of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF). The MNLF was not party to the 2014 peace accord. It forged a separate settlement with the Philippine government in 1996.

LOOK: Duterte meets Misuari in Malacañang

Murad said the MILF was "open" to discuss the Bangsamoro leadership with elections coming in 2022.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/07/11/19/milf-consistent-in-supporting-federalism-says-murad

Duterte, Misuari meet in Palace for third time

From the Manila Bulletin (Jul 10, 2019): Duterte, Misuari meet in Palace for third time

President Duterte met for the third time with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founding chairman Nur Misuari in Malacañang Tuesday.




President Rodrigo Roa Duterte poses for posterity with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) Founding Chairman Nur Misuari, other MNLF officials, some members of the cabinet, and Senator Christopher Lawrence “Bong” Go during their meeting at the Malacañan Palace on July 9, 2019. (KING RODRIGUEZ / PRESIDENTIAL PHOTO / MANILA BULLETIN)

While Malacañang has yet to release details of the meeting, official photos showed Duterte and Misuari in an embrace as Cabinet members stood by.

Joining the two in their meeting were Presidential Peace Adviser Carlito Galvez, Agriculture Secretary Manny Piñol, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, and Senator Christopher “Bong” Go.


Duterte has repeatedly expressed his desire to talk to Misuari about the peace process in Mindanao, especially following the establishment of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).

The two leaders previously met on February 25 and March 19.

In March this year, Duterte revealed that Misuari asked him “to intercede in his behalf” so that the Moro leader will be allowed to leave the country despite several cases pending before the Sandiganbayan.

Misuari left the country on February 26 for Abu Dhabi for the OIC Summit, and later on to Morocco for the Parliamentary Union of the OIC member states. Duterte assured law enforcers that Misuari will return to the Philippines, saying the latter is a revolutionary and not a fugitive.

In February, Duterte had a brief meeting with Misuari in Malacañang, days after he formed the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), a committee dominated by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

According to Malacañang, Duterte apologized to Misuari for supposedly not able to implement “agreements” on federalism.

Duterte acknowledged that Misuari’s role is important in bringing peace in Mindanao.

Kalinaw News: Special Forces partners with Bukidnon youth organization

Posted to Kalinaw News (Jul 10, 2019): Special Forces partners with Bukidnon youth organization

Special Forces partners with Bukidnon youth organization 1

Special Forces partners with Bukidnon youth organization 2

Special Forces partners with Bukidnon youth organization 3

MANOLO FORTICH, Bukidnon, July 8 – The 1st Special Forces Battalion (1SFBn) hosted the Propelling Our Inherited Nation Through our Youth (POINTY), Inc. Manolo Fortich Cluster election for 2019 – 2022 at Battalion Multi-Purpose Hall, Barangay Mampayag, this municipality.

Army’s 1st Special Forces “Anytime Anywhere” Battalion had started its partnership with POINTY Inc. Bukidnon Chapter as well as Manolo Fortich Cluster since Lt Colonel Sergio P Macandan Jr assumes command of 1SFBn last February 2018, this youth organization has its advocacy to help young people to develop and maximize its leadership potential, to be a good-leader and be of service for peace and development.

Jovanne Gambalan, Newly Elected Cluster President, “As POINTY Bukidnon continues to carry on the legacy of good leadership in partnership with the 1SFBn, I challenge the new set of officers of POINTY Manolo Cluster to go beyond your comfort zones. As leaders, we should expand our horizons to learn new things, experience new events, acquire new skills, and understand situations with silver linings. The 1SFBn and POINTY Bukidnon will work hand-in-hand for peaceful-nation building.”

Major Frankjo Boral, 1SFBn civil-military operations officer said the election with the theme “fruitful through service” is aimed to converging of efforts between Army and youth’s mutually functioning throughout its area of operations on community support program (CSP).

Immediately after the election tackles various concerns such as sustenance of CSP through peace building seminar, youth leadership summit and other youth related activities, public-relations, and crafting of joint-plans.

Lt Colonel Sergio P Macarandan Jr, 1SFBn battalion commander said there is a need to jointly upgrade the skills in social-media and strategic communication of their personnel and youths to effectively perform their responsibility and serve the local populace. “It is very important as well that we synergize our efforts with our partner youth organization and we thank the POINTY Inc. Bukidnon Chapter for their commendable unconditional service in backing-up our CSP since last year.” he said.




402nd Infantry Brigade, 4th Infantry Division Philippine Army
CPT FRANCISCO P GARELLO JR (INF) PA
402nd Bde Civil Military Operations Officer
Contact Number:0915-054-3439/0948-641-6783
Add us on Facebook at: RAJAH KULAMBO (Stinger)

[Kalinaw News is the official online source of information on the pursuit for peace by the Philippine Army. It provides information on the activities of Army Units nationwide in the performance of their duty of Serving the People and Securing the Land. This website is a property of the Civil-Military Operations Regiment, Philippine Army located at Lawton Avenue, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City.]

Kalinaw News: Army commanders in Caraga pay courtesy call to Surigao del Sur Chief Executive

Posted to Kalinaw News (Jul 10, 2019): Army commanders in Caraga pay courtesy call to Surigao del Sur Chief Executive

Army commanders in Caraga pay courtesy call to Surigao del Sur Chief Executive 1

Army commanders in Caraga pay courtesy call to Surigao del Sur Chief Executive 2

Army commanders in Caraga pay courtesy call to Surigao del Sur Chief Executive 3

TANDAG CITY, Surigao del Sur -Commanders of the 401st and 402nd Infantry Brigades of the Philippine Army covering the Province of Surigao del Sur paid courtesy call to Governor Alexander “Ayec” Pimentel at the Provincial Capitol yesterday morning, July 8.

Colonel Allan Hambala and Colonel Maurito Licudine, Brigade Commanders of 401st and 402nd Brigade respectively, together with the Battalion Commanders of 75th Infantry Battalion (IB), 36IB and 3rd Special Forces Battalion paid visit to the newly-installed chief executive of the province to formally introduce themselves and update the governor on the current peace and order situation of the province and the security and development efforts being undertaken by the Army units on the ground.

Surigao del Sur is one of the eight provinces covered by the Army’s 4th Infantry Diamond Division based in Camp Edilberto Evangelista, Patag, Cagayan de Oro City. The two cities and 17 municipalities of the province are further geographically subdivided by three infantry battalions which confront the terrorist groups of the New Peoples Army.

According to Colonel Hambala, the visit was just the start of a frequent engagement between the Provincial Government of Surigao del Sur and the 401st Brigade, as the unit covers Bislig City and the seven municipalities of Surigao Sur. “With the implementation of EO 70 in the region, Surigao del Sur, which has 12 municipalities identified as Peace and Development Zones (PDZ), must fully take advantage of the opportunities that will be brought by these initiative,” Hambala said.

“With a strong political will and continuous commitment of our new local chief executives in Sursur spearheaded by Governor Pimentel, I am very sure that the localized implementation of EO 70 will become effective and successful in the whole province,” Hambala added.



Kalinaw News: 56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag

Posted to Kalinaw News (Jul 10, 2019): 56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag

56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag 1

56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag 2

56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag 3

56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag 4

56th Infantry Battalion initiates community outreach program at Sitio Tibucag 5

Headquarters 56th Infantry (TATAG) Battalion, 7ID, PA, Brgy Sto Niño, Talaingod, Davao del Norte – More than 600 residents of Sitio Tibucag, Brgy Dagohoy, Talaingod, Davao del Norte, mostly indigents were the recipients of the Joint Community Outreach Program dubbed as “Pulong-pulong, Pagpakabana, Panaghiusa ug Pagtinabangay alang sa Sitio Tibucag”, which was initiated by the 56th Infantry (TATAG) Battalion under the Leadership of LTC NORMAN E VALDEZ INF (GSC) PA, its Battalion Commander. The activity was conducted in collaboration with LGU Talaingod and KIWANIS International on 08 July 2019.

In order to address the basic health services needed by the area, the Municipal Health Office (MHO) -Talaingod headed by Dr Montana Amir Dominguez and the 10th Forward Support Medical Company, 10ID, PA headed by LTC RAUL SASUCA (MC) PA provided medical services to the locals of the said Sitio.

A total of 192 indigents availed the medical consultation whom were accorded free medicines, vitamins and porridge meal while 275 students of Tibucag Integrated School received set of school supplies and toys during the said event.

The Municipal Agriculture Office (MAGRO) of Talaingod also conducted lecture on Egg Production and Corn Farming to help the community start their own livelihood venture to support their families. Mr Rolando E Salazar, Public Employment Service Office (PESO) Manager of Talaingod discussed the process of registration and accreditation of entitled organization.

CPT Dema-ala also discussed the salient features of the Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program (E-CLIP) of the government and subsequently distributed 50 sacks of corn seeds to the farmers in the area.

LTC NORMAN E VALDEZ INF (GSC) PA, Acting Battalion Commander, 56IB gave his statement during the opening of the activity. In his speech, LTC VALDEZ said “Your soldiers will continue to support and provide activities that aim to strengthen the partnership of the local governments, national government agencies and other stakeholders in providing interventions to improve the economic, health and social well-being of the residents in the far-flung communities. This activity may not be enough to address the daily needs of this Sitio, but we are hoping that through these initial activities, you (lumads) will also help this community attain economic development that would benefit the people of Sitio Tibucag”.

The 56th Infantry (TATAG) Battalion, together with the different stakeholders, will continue to bridge government programs and stakeholders’ support to help in the development of remote areas within its area of operation.



56th Infantry Battalion 7th Infantry Division
CPT John Louie Dema-ala (INF)
Public Information Officer
56th Infantry (TATAG) Battalion
Cellphone No: 09673514403
E Mail Address: cmotatag56@gmail.com

[Kalinaw News is the official online source of information on the pursuit for peace by the Philippine Army. It provides information on the activities of Army Units nationwide in the performance of their duty of Serving the People and Securing the Land. This website is a property of the Civil-Military Operations Regiment, Philippine Army located at Lawton Avenue, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City.]

AFP-CRS: Tactical, Survival & Arms Expo

Posted to the Armed Forces of the Philippines-Civil Relations Service (AFP-CRS) Facebook Page (Jul 10, 2019): Tactical, Survival  & Arms Expo

Apply for your LTOPF and Firearm registration at the Tactical, Survival and Arms Expo (TACS Expo) on JULY 18-21 at the SMX AURA Convention Center, BGC.



AFP-CRS: What is the root cause of conflict and violence?

Posted to the Armed Forces of the Philippines-Civil Relations Service (AFP-CRS) Facebook Page (Jul 10, 2019): What is the root cause of conflict and violence?

What is the root cause of conflict and violence?

To ensure complete victory, we need to create communities that are conflict-resilient and we need local and national government agencies to attain this.

Not all battles are won using guns, many victories are achieved using peaceful means. This is what we are doing in Northern Mindanao -sowing the seeds of Peace and Development, our legacy for the future generations!



https://www.facebook.com/pia10normin/photos/a.453193151400738/2256910424362326/?type=3&theater

https://www.facebook.com/CivilRelationsServiceAFP/?fref=photo

AFP-CRS: Indigenous Peoples break their silence on abuses by communist terrorists

Posted to the Armed Forces of the Philippines-Civil Relations Service (AFP-CRS) Facebook Page (Jul 10, 2019): Indigenous Peoples break their silence on abuses by communist terrorists

Indigenous Peoples break their silence on abuses by communist terrorists to their tribes and families. Datu Bawan Jacob Lanes appeals to international institutions to help them in protecting and strengthening IP rights while fighting off the insurgents.



https://www.facebook.com/pcooglobalmedia/photos/a.362437577712556/396403177649329/?type=3&theater

https://www.facebook.com/CivilRelationsServiceAFP/?fref=photo

AFP-CRS: KOOPERASYON NG LGUs AT MAMAMAYAN AY ISANG SOLUSYON PARA MATAPOS ANG TERORISMO!

Posted to the Armed Forces of the Philippines-Civil Relations Service (AFP-CRS) Facebook Page (Jul 10, 2019): KOOPERASYON NG LGUs AT MAMAMAYAN AY ISANG SOLUSYON PARA MATAPOS ANG TERORISMO!

Tatlong myembro ng ASG at 28 di kalibreng armas isinuko sa 18IB. Bunga ito ng pinaigting na security operations, at kooperasyon ng mga lgus. Iprinisinta ang mga sumuko at armas kay BGEN FERNANDO M REYEG AFP, Commander ng JTF Basilan, noong Hulyo 10, 2019.

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Piñol not popular among Bangsamoro people – BTA chief Murad

From Rappler (Jul 9, 2019): Piñol not popular among Bangsamoro people – BTA chief Murad

Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol is seen as 'very anti-Bangsamoro struggle for self-determination' by many people in the new region, says BTA Interim Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim

NEW ROLE? Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol's possible appointment as Mindanao Development Authority secretary is not supported by many in the Bangsamoro region, says Bangsamoro Transition Authority chief Murad Ebrahim. File photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

NEW ROLE? Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol's possible appointment as Mindanao Development Authority secretary is not supported by many in the Bangsamoro region, says Bangsamoro Transition Authority chief Murad Ebrahim. File photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Not everyone in the new Bangsamoro autonomous region is happy that President Rodrigo Duterte is inclined to appointAgriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol as head of the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA).

After his possible appointment was announced by Duterte, members of Bangsamoro groups, including members of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), have been airing their negative views about Piñol in private.

Even
BTA Interim Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim acknowledged this sentiment, though he maintained that he would respect Piñol's appointment if it comes to pass.


"It's the President's prerogative who he will appoint because that comes with Cabinet rank. But our observation is, with due respect to Secretary Manny, he isn't very popular among the Bangsamoro," Murad told Rappler on Tuesday, July 9.

Those who reject Piñol see him as "very anti-Bangsamoro struggle for self-determination," said Murad, citing Piñol's involvement in opposing an early agreement between the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the government.

Piñol, as North Cotabato governor, was one of the Mindanaoan officials who filed a petition to nullify the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD), an agreement reached by the government then, and the MILF.

In August 2008, a day before the MOA-AD was supposed to be signed, the Supreme Court (SC) issued a temporary restraining order, which stopped the signing. This led outraged MILF forces to occupy parts of North Cotabato and raid parts of Lanao del Norte and Sarangani.

Months later, in October, the SC declared the agreement unconstitutional.

The MILF, the Muslim group that fought for the MOA-AD, is now the dominant force in the BTA, the interim government tasked to lead the new Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), the product of successful agreement between the MILF and the government.

Murad, BTA chief, is also MILF chairman.


Duterte to consider views

Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo, on Tuesday, said Duterte is likely to consider the views of BTA members and the Bangsamoro people when finalizing his choice for MinDA secretary.

"I suppose the President will take any factor being introduced by concerned players in that region. Of course, the President will consider all that," said Panelo during a Malacañang news briefing.

Duterte himself had said he would consult Murad first about his plan to appoint Piñol. The Chief Executive has said Piñol could end up leading MinDA or with the more vague role of being his "point person" for the Bangsamoro region.

Duterte said he thinks such a role is necessary because he found the progress being made by the BTA too slow. Last June 25, he told the BTA to "hurry up" and cited a supposed communication "breakdown" between him and its leaders.

Murad has asked to meet with Duterte on Wednesday, July 10. Panelo was unable to confirm if the meeting will push through.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/234946-murad-says-pinol-not-popular-among-bangsamoro-people

Duterte meets with MNLF founder Misuari

From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jul 10, 2019): Duterte meets with MNLF founder Misuari

MANILA, Philippines – For the third time this year, President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday met with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founding chairman Nur Misuari in Malacañang.

Joining Duterte in the meeting were former presidential aide and now Sen. Christopher “Bong” Go, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Carlito Galvez, Jr. and Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol.


Piñol is being eyed by Duterte to be his “point man” in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), which was a product of the peace agreement between the government and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

Details of the meeting have yet to be released as of posting time.

Ex-rebels get lot titles, drug surrenderers freed on plea bargain deal in Compostela Valley

From tge Business Mirror (Jul 10, 2019): Ex-rebels get lot titles, drug surrenderers freed on plea bargain deal in Compostela Valley

The Compostela Valley provincial government handed out land titles and gave cash assistance to former New People’s Army (NPA) guerrillas to consolidate the local government’s effort in integrating them back to the communities.

Under its program Operation Plan Pagbabago, Tulong Serbisyo, the province also announced that some 60 drug offenders would soon be released from different jails in the province after entering into a plea bargain deal with provincial officials.

On July 4 and 5, the provincial government distributed 149 land titles to former NPAs who are residents of Barangay Araibo in Pantukan town. They were also granted P300,000 in cash assistance.

The Department of Agrarian Reform also distributed titles, while the Department of Social Welfare and Development sepatately gave P300,000 to the members of Araibo Bugasan Pamana SLP (Payapa at Masaganang Pamayanan-Sustainable Livelihood Program) Association.


The province and the government agencies also provided dental and clinical services, welfare services and government office services, and distributed school supplies to children.

Pantukan Municipal Mayor Roberto Yugo, along with Gov. Jayvee Tyron Uy, gave both the land titles and cash assistance.

The Oplan Pagbabago was adapted as a special provincial government program of Gov. Uy through Executive Order 028-2018 to provide assistance to former rebels in the province. As a prerequisite, the beneficiaries must have already surrendered and have sought support from the government for a more peaceful life with their families.

The program already helped more than 7,000 people throughout the province.

Meanwhile, a similar program called Oplan Bagong Buhay would help secure the release of some 60 inmates jailed for drug-related offenses from the different jails in the province.

The inmates helped secure their release after they went through a plea bargaining requiring them to enter a rehabilitation program.

Only those arrested on a lesser drug offense were legible for the plea bargain, according to a government guideline on plea bargaining on drug offense. The province said this was allowed by the Supreme Court to speed up the decongestion of jails.

NPAs strip Isabela cops of guns

From the Manila Standard (Jul 9, 2019): NPAs strip Isabela cops of guns

Camp Marcelo A Adduru, Tuguegarao City—The Police Regional Office 2 has condemned the New People’s Army for its “agaw-armas” (weapons snatching) against five members of the Isabela police and the killing of a member of the Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Office-Isabela Environment Protection Task Force in Ilagan City.

PRO2 Regional Director Police Brig. Gen. Jose Mario M. Espino condemned the atrocities made by the communist NPAs against members of Philippine National Police Isabela in a statement issued Tuesday.


The rebels seized weapons from PCpl Gaudencio Castillo Jr and PCpl Earl Brian Gannaban, both assigned at the Cauayan City Police Station; PSSg Fernando Capillian of the Cordon PS; PMSg Julius Baribad and PCPL Bryan Q Balisi of the Divilacan PS.

Investigation disclosed that at about 7:30 am on July 5 in Sitio Lagis, Purok 7, Brgy. Sindun Bayabo, Ilagan, Castillo, Gannaban and Capillian boarded a pick-up while traversing Ilagan-Divilacan road going to Divilacan.

Upon reaching the place of incident, the policemen were accosted by 25 fully armed NPA members headed by Ka Uno and Ka Damian and took their issued short firearms, handheld radios, money and other personal belongings. 

At about 8 am of the same date, the communist rebels also accosted Baribad and Balisi and took their issued short firearms.

During investigation, the victims identified one of the suspects as a certain Ka Uno, Secretary of the NPA Southern Front, and a female member of CTG identified as Valencia through photographs.

Meanwhile, at about 2:45 pm on Friday, concerned citizen reported the death of Celso Asuncion, 58, married, and a member of Isabela Environment Protection Task Force. He was a resident of Brgy. Cabisera 10 in Ilagan.

Asuncion was found dead inside their task force office. Based on the follow-up investigation, the police found out that the suspects involve in the “agaw armas” against members of PNP Isabela were also responsible in the killing of the PENRO officer.

http://manilastandard.net/lgu/luzon/299356/npas-strip-isabela-cops-of-guns.html

Maguindanao village exec, 3 others die in Cotabato ambush

From the Philippine News Agency (Jul 11, 2019): Maguindanao village exec, 3 others die in Cotabato ambush


AMBUSHED VEHICLE. Police investigators inspect the bullet-riddled vehicle of Maguindanao village officials of Barangay Tuka, Mamasapano that was ambushed along Notre Dame Avenue, Cotabato City on Wednesday, July 10, 2019. The four occupants of the vehicle died in the incident. (Photo by CCPO)
COTABATO CITY – The death toll in the ambush perpetrated by still unidentified gunmen Wednesday afternoon here rose to four with three of the victims expiring one after another at a hospital, police said.

An updated report of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG)-Maguindanao identified the fatalities as
Datu Norodin Mangandian Guiaman, 34, chairperson of Barangay Tuka, Mamasapano, Maguindanao;Tuka barangay treasurer Sindatu Agao, Barangay Peacekeeping Action Team (BPAT) member Basser Guiaman, 42; and Alwaida Guiaman, 28, wife of chairman Guiaman.


Col. Portia Manalad, city police director, earlier reported that Basser Guiaman died on the spot following the incident.

However, couple Norodin and Alawaida Guiaman, and Agao expired while undergoing treatment at a hospital.

Major Esmael Madin, chief of CIDG-Maguindanao, said all the victims were onboard a gray Toyota Vios sedan with temporary license plate when six gunmen onboard three separate motorbikes opened fire on them along Notre Dame Avenue at 1:40 p.m. Wednesday.
Scene of the Crime Operatives (SOCO) found two pistols inside the victims’ car believed to have been used by the victims in an attempt to fire back. Some 40 empty shells of .45-caliber pistol and 9-mm pistol were recovered at the ambush site.

Investigators believed the ambush was triggered by a “rido” (family feud) involving the village official and another clan in Mamasapano, Maguindanao.

Police are reviewing CCTV footage near the crime scene to help determine the identity of attackers.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1074648

Mina Chang to serve as USAID exec, not envoy to PH: Embassy

From the Philippine News Agency (Jul 11, 2019): Mina Chang to serve as USAID exec, not envoy to PH: Embassy


Deputy Assistant Secretary Mina Chang of the State Department Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations. (Photo courtesy: US State Department)

The United States Embassy in Manila on Wednesday said Mina Chang will serve as an executive of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), dismissing reports she will replace current Ambassador Sung Kim.

"We’ve seen this claim. It is not true," the Embassy, through acting Press Attaché Trude Raizen, said in a statement.
On Tuesday, reports surfaced that Chang, currently assigned as the deputy assistant secretary at the State Department Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations, is being eyed as the next US Ambassador to Manila, with Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo even noting the reports.

The Embassy said President Donald Trump's intent to nominate Chang as the Assistant Administrator of the USAID for the Bureau of Asia was announced in September 2018.

"The nomination was referred to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in January 2019. There have been no additional White House announcements regarding her nomination to the USAID position," the Embassy clarified.

Kim assumed his post as Washington's envoy to Manila in 2016, replacing Philip Goldberg, who served from 2013 to 2016.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1074596

White House names Sung Kim as next US envoy to Indonesia

From the Philippine News Agency (Jul 11, 2019): White House names Sung Kim as next US envoy to Indonesia


OUTGOING ENVOY. Ambassador Sung Kim during the US Independence Day celebrations in Makati City. Kim is eyed as the next American top diplomat to Indonesia. (PNA photo by Joyce Ann L. Rocamora)

United States Ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim is eyed as the next American top diplomat to Indonesia, the White House announced Thursday.

President Donald Trump's plan to nominate Kim as the US Ambassador to Jakarta comes as the envoy nears the end of his tour of duty in the Philippines this year.

"Ambassador Kim's extensive history of public service at the Department of State, including as Ambassador to the Republic of Korea, Special Envoy for the Six-Party Talks, Director of the Office of Korean Affairs, Special Representative for North Korea Policy, and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs," the White House said.

Kim earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Pennsylvania, doctor of jurisprudence degree from Loyola University Law School, and Masters of Law from the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Two years into his post as the US top diplomat in Manila, Kim received the Presidential Meritorious Honor Award in 2018.

Kim assumed his post in the Philippines last December 2016, replacing Philip Goldberg, who served from 2013 to 2016.

The announcement did not mention who will replace Kim as the next US envoy in the Philippines.

On Tuesday, the US Embassy in Manila denied rumors that Kim would be replaced by Mina Chang, the deputy assistant secretary of the State Department Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1074656

China's maritime aggression should strengthen US-Philippine alliance

Posted to the Nikkei Asian Review (Jul 11, 2019): China's maritime aggression should strengthen US-Philippine alliance (By Richard Heydarian)

Washington must stand up for Manila, despite Duterte's overtures to Beijing



The Trump administration has sent a growing number of aircraft carrier groups to Philippine waters. © AP

Manila and Washington will officially commence the annual review of their mutual defense treaty in late July, in what is likely be the most important review of its kind in a generation.

The allies are seeking to recalibrate their century-old alliance to new security challenges, headed by the threat from China.

And there is a growing sense of strategic urgency. The June 9 incident in Reed Bank, where a suspected Chinese militia vessel sunk a Filipino vessel in the South China Sea, has strengthened calls for a stronger Philippine-U.S. alliance.

Despite Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's anti-Western tirades, the U.S. and the Philippines have progressively expanded defense cooperation in nontraditional security areas, particularly in counterterrorism, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations.

What they should focus on next, however, is enhancing cooperation on maritime security, particularly as China scales up its expansionism with "gray-zone" tactics -- acts of aggression designed to intimidate and disrupt fisheries and military access by other claimant states, but which are short of armed clashes. These include deploying militia forces to the South China Sea.



Damaged Philippine fishing boat lies in the area where it was allegedly rammed by a Chinese vessel in the waters of Reed Bank at South China Sea, Philippines. © Department of Agriculture/AP

This year's review will be far from routine. It comes just months after Philippine defense secretary Delfin Lorenzana called for a comprehensive review of the MDT in a rapidly shifting geopolitical environment.

A former defense attache in Washington D.C., Lorenzana even suggested scrapping the alliance altogether. Throughout the year, he has repeatedly raised doubts about Washington's commitment to assist the Philippines as tensions rise in the South China Sea.

Two things, however, are pushing the allies closer together. First of all, China is sending an armada of militia-cum-fishermen to contested areas of the South China Sea.

Between January and April, close to 300 suspected Chinese militia vessels swarmed and surrounded the parts of the Spratly Islands held by the Philippines. This went hand in hand with the growing harassment of Filipino fishermen in the Scarborough Shoal, which has been under the de facto occupation of Chinese paramilitary forces but is claimed by the Philippines.

Things came to head in June when a suspected Chinese militia vessel rammed and sank a Filipino fishing boat in the Reed Bank, an energy-rich area that falls within the Philippines' Exclusive Economic Zone.



In response, Lorenzana issued, "in the strongest terms," a strident public condemnation against the Chinese vessel's "cowardly action." The Philippine military's Western Command, which oversees the country's claims in the South China Sea, and navy accused the Chinese vessel of intentionally ramming the anchored Filipino vessel. An investigation by the Philippine Coast Guard also found the Chinese vessel culpable.

Eager to maintain friendly ties with China, Duterte stubbornly downplayed the incident as a "little maritime accident," effectively echoing Beijing's line, which described the event as an "ordinary maritime incident."

The Philippine defense establishment, however, has become ever more suspicious about China's intentions in adjacent waters. They see the latest events in the South China Sea as part of a broader Chinese "people's war at sea" strategy, where militia-cum-fishermen are the tip of the dagger of Beijing's maritime expansionism.

Leveraging their influence on the Duterte administration, which has actively courted the military's favor, the defense establishment is pushing for tighter cooperation with the U.S. against China, senior officials have told me. And they have major political figures on their side, with statesmen openly calling on the government to invoke the MDT against China in the South China Sea.

"The MDT is one yet untapped weapon. I am not suggesting World War III but at least it can make China feel the balance of power in the [South China Sea]," Senator Panfilo Lacson, an independent statesman, said at the height of the Reed Bank crisis. Surveys also repeatedly show that a majority of Filipinos see the U.S. as the Philippines' most trusted friend, while favoring a tougher stance against China.

The second factor behind the tightening bilateral alliance is the Trump's administration willingness to take the fight to China, expand its military footprint in the area and provide greater strategic assurance to allies such as the Philippines.

In recent months, Washington has progressively clarified the precise parameters of its alliance commitments to Manila in the South China Sea.

Months earlier, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a surprise visit to the Philippines, where he clarified that "as the South China Sea is part of the Pacific, any armed attack on Philippine forces, aircraft or public vessels in the South China Sea will trigger mutual defense obligations."

This was the first time that a senior American diplomat had openly explained the precise geographical scope of the Philippine-U.S. MDT.

More recently, against the backdrop of the Reed Bank crisis, the U.S. ambassador to the Philippines, Sung Kim, went so far as to say that "any armed attack" by "government-sanctioned... Chinese militia" against the Philippines' military forces, aircraft and public vessels in the area could also be covered by the alliance obligations.

To reassure its regional allies of its intention to draw the line in China's adjacent waters, the Trump administration has more frequently deployed warships to conduct so-called Freedom of Navigation Operations in the South China Sea; sent growing number of aircraft carrier groups to Philippine waters; and committed some of its most advanced assets, including F35 stealth fighters, to join military exercises with the Philippines in the area.

This year, the two allies are scheduled to conduct up to 280 joint military activities, the highest among American allies in the Indo-Pacific.

Amid these developments, Defense Secretary Lorenzana told me that scrapping or overhauling the bilateral alliance is no longer on the table. Instead, they are exploring the introduction of new operational guidelines, which will enhance their joint response to common security threats.

As long as unprovoked Chinese aggression in contested areas continues, the Trump administration should further clarify its commitment to defend its allies. Meanwhile, the Philippines should welcome expanded maritime security interoperability, more frequent joint war-games and even enhanced American military access to strategic bases close to the South China Sea.

This way, the two allies can better manage shared security concerns in the region and, along the way, reconfigure their alliance against emerging 21st-century challenges.



[Richard Heydarian is a Manila-based academic, columnist and author of "The Rise of Duterte: A Populist Revolt Against Elite Democracy" and forthcoming "The Indo-Pacific: Trump, China and the New Global Struggle for Mastery."]

https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/China-s-maritime-aggression-should-strengthen-US-Philippine-alliance

China Is Winning the Silent War to Dominate the South China Sea

From Bloomberg (Jul 10, 2019): China Is Winning the Silent War to Dominate the South China Sea (By Nguyen Xuan Quynh, Andreo Calonzo, Philip J. Heijmans, Hannah Dormido and Adrian Leung)

Standing captive on the bow of his boat, hands clasped tightly behind his head, Vietnamese fishing trawler captain Tran Van Nhan and his crew were told to stay quiet and look away as Chinese sailors wielding electric prods stole their catch.

The unreported incident last month was the first time Nhan had been caught by China’s Coast Guard since it stepped up patrols in contested areas of the South China Sea a few years back. Six Chinese officials in blue uniforms boarded his tiny trawler from a 3,000-ton armored patrol ship to tell him to stop fishing in waters that had supported his forefathers for generations.

Caught in the Middle

Fishermen encounter Chinese vessels in disputed areas several miles from their home bases


Hometown of
fisherman
Tran Van Nhan
and his crew
Filipino fishermen
say they are scared
to go back to this spot
because of run-ins
with Chinese vessels
PHILIPPINES
Paracel
Islands
Zambales
Tam Quang
Scarborough
Shoal
South China
Sea
The Vietnamese crew
say this is where the
Chinese vessel stole
their catch
Filipino fishermen
Job Dalisaymo
and Jorge Limuardo’s
hometown
VIETNAM
Spratlys
200 mi
200 km

“They said ‘This is China’s water. You are not allowed to go fishing here. If you continue to do this, your net will be cut and your boat will be taken to China and you will be punished,’” Nhan, 43, said while sitting on his trawler as it docked in Tam Quang, a small fishing commune in the central Vietnam province of Quang Nam.


Tran Van Nhan on his fishing trawler. Photographer: Maika Elan/Bloomberg
Nhan’s crew lost everything it had worked for days to catch—just over two tons of dried squid valued at some $10,000, roughly four times the average Vietnamese annual income. There was nothing to do but return home. “The crew was terrified and didn’t have any spirit left to continue fishing,” he said.
Fishermen like Nhan are on the front lines of Asia’s most complex territorial dispute, which involves six claimants and outside powers like the U.S. with an interest in protecting a waterway that carries more than $3 trillion in trade each year. While many incidents go unreported, China’s investments in patrolling the South China Sea have given it a leg up in the race to secure energy and fishing resources that account for about a tenth of the global catch.

Maritime Minefield

Sites of reported clashes between fishermen and Chinese naval vessels, 2010-2019


CHINA
TAIWAN
LAOS
South China
Sea
Philippine
Sea
Bay of
Bengal
THAILAND
VIETNAM
CAMBODIA
PHILIPPINES
MALAYSIA
INDONESIA
500 mi
500 km

“You can call it a silent war,” said Le Hong Hiep, a fellow at Singapore’s ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute. The Chinese “are contesting waters. There is violence. It happens all the time.”

Attacks by Chinese vessels have become commonplace while maritime run-ins also happen—though with much less frequency—between the smaller claimants Still, showy efforts to protect their own borders, including public diplomatic protests and even sinking Chinese ships, has done little to slow China’s grasp on the waters.

Several high-profile incidents in recent months have spotlighted the increased dangers of fishing in the South China Sea. In March, Vietnam accused a Chinese coast guard vessel of sinking a fishing boat near the Paracel Islands. Then last month a Chinese vessel collided with a Philippine trawler near the islands further to the south, leaving 22 Filipino fishermen stranded at sea.

sea.



A Chinese coastguard ship seen near Scarborough shoal in the South China Sea on May 14. Photographer: Ted Aljibe/AFP via Getty Images
Under President Xi Jinping, China has more forcefully asserted its claims to more than 80% of the South China Sea, building runways and military facilities on territory claimed by other nations. It has also raised a navy of more than over 300 ships, eclipsing the U.S. to become the largest in the Asia Pacific.
In addition, China has utilized less conventional means to clear the sea of its maritime adversaries—a so-called maritime militia of well-equipped vessels numbering in the hundreds—disguised as fishing vessels that patrol, surveil, resupply, and sometimes, provoke. At least one Chinese maritime law enforcement vessel was involved in 73% of all reported incidents in the South China Sea since 2010, according to data compiled by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Fleet Expansion

Total coast guard ship capacity


2010
2016
200K tons
150
100
50
0
Indonesia
Malaysia
Philippines
Vietnam
Japan
China
“By any metric, the Chinese are involved in the majority of the violent incidents, either the Chinese Coast Guard, or the Chinese fisherman getting into it with their neighbors,” said Gregory Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative in Washington, pointing to violent incidents in the Paracels. “Vietnamese fishers are often harassed, boarded, beat up, held for ransom even by the Chinese.”

China has rejected claims that it’s doing anything out of the ordinary in the South China Sea, repeatedly calling for disputes to be resolved through one-on-one talks and for countries like the U.S. to avoid interfering.

Incidents can be resolved “based on the principle of mutual compromise and friendly consultation,” foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said this month when asked about the collision with the Philippine trawler.

“We do not want some individual incidents to be amplified and interfere with the overall situation of our bilateral relations,” Geng said.



Workers sort fish at the Tam Quang harbor in Vietnam. Photographer: Maika Elan/Bloomberg
In the Philippines, enduring maritime tensions with Beijing pose a serious risk for the country’s $5.15 billion fishing industry.
Job Dalisaymo, a 71-year-old lifelong fisherman, said the growing safety concerns are pushing him out of the industry. His once peaceful excursions to Scarborough Shoal some 120 nautical miles west of the Philippine island of Luzon have in recent years been met by unprovoked violence, a risk he said he’s no longer willing to take.

“I fear going back there—we might not make it back home alive,” Dalisaymo said while sitting beneath a rickety bamboo awning on a stretch of coast along Zambales province north of Manila. “Who knows, maybe they’ll use water cannons again and leave us floating there.”

Disputed Territory

Claims to the South China Sea’s waters, reefs and islands conflict


CHINA
TAIWAN
Area in the
South China Sea
with multiple claimants
LAOS
Bay of
Bengal
Philippine
Sea
THAILAND
CAMBODIA
PHILIPPINES
VIETNAM
MALAYSIA
Exclusive economic zones
of countries surrounding
the South China Sea
INDONESIA
500 mi
500 km
Scarborough Shoal has for years been a source of tension between Beijing and Manila after the Philippine Navy apprehended a group of Chinese fishing frigates there in 2012 for trespassing. The Philippines in 2016 won a case against China before an international tribunal, but that didn’t stop Beijing from building on disputed territory.



Job Dalisaymo in his home in the coastal town of Cabangan in Zambales province, the Philippines. Photographer: Geric Cruz/Bloomberg
The ensuing naval build up has exacerbated other problems devastating the fishing industry, from widespread poaching to depleted fishing stocks stemming from extreme environmental damage, data shows. Total fish stocks have dropped by 70-95% since the 1950s, according to CSIS, while catch rates have declined by 66-75% over the last 20 years.

Quantity of Marine Life in the South China Sea Projected to Decrease by 2045



Sharks
Crab
Squid
Shrimp
Sea bream
Grouper
Reef fish
Tuna
Large croaker
Sardines
Threadfin bream


“It used to be paradise—all the good fish would go near our boat,” said fisherman Jorge Limuardo, who has stopped fishing from the shoal after Chinese vessels limited access. “Now all the corals have been removed. It’s now like a forest with all the trees cut off.”

The plight of fisherman also political ramifications. In the Philippines, last month’s boat collision has stoked deep divisions within a government that has struggled to counter Chinese assertiveness in the face of warming ties between President Rodrigo Duterte and counterpart Xi Jinping.

Villagers handle a fishing boat in San Agustin Village in Iba town in the Philippines. Photographer: Geric Cruz/Bloomberg

The incident prompted contradictory statements from government and military officials, with some calling on the Philippines to assert its territorial rights, while others offered a softer stance. Duterte would not speak of the matter directly until days later, when he downgraded to the collision to a “maritime incident.”

“If I want to prohibit Chinese fishing, how do I enforce my desire?” he said during a speech on June 26. “Even America won’t do so out of fear of confrontation there.”

Indonesia has adopted a more aggressive approach to the fishing crisis, asserting its claim to develop fishing storage facilities on the Natuna Regency off the northwest coast of Borneo. To deal with poaching, they often destroy dozens of boats seized in its waters, many of which are Chinese.


Basket boats are seen anchored at the Tam Quang harbor. Photographer: Maika Elan/Bloomberg
In Vietnam, Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Le Thi Thu Hang last month demanded compensation for its fishermen after Chinese vessels chased and stole property from them near the Paracel Islands.
China has dismissed such requests for compensation in the past, instead accusing other nations of breaching the law. A draft code of conduct with Southeast Asian nations has made little progress over the past decade despite regular discussions.

For Nhan, the Vietnamese fisherman who surrendered his catch to China, the solution is more straight forward.

“The water belongs to Vietnam, the Paracel Islands belong to us,” he said. “We have been fishing in this water since our grandparents’ generation.