From the Philippine Star (Jan 3): MILF
to help in dismantling private armies in Mindanao
Local sectors want Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Teresita
Quintos-Deles to forge ahead with government's plan to involve the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front in dismantling private armed groups in the South, convinced it
will help enhance the rebel group’s capacity to secure the supposed territory of
the Bangsamoro region.
Under the 1997 Agreement on General Cessation of Hostilities, the GPH and
MILF panels are to mutually cooperate in addressing peace and security issues in
flashpoint areas in Mindanao to ensure the cordiality of the peace talks and
prevent criminals and terrorists from seeking sanctuary in rebel territories
covered by the ceasefire pact. “This is something we need to support. If we want good, pro-people politics
to reign in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, we need to take out all
private armies in the area,” said the ARMM’s acting governor, Mujiv Hataman,
referring to the announcement of Deles about a plan to tap the MILF in the
government’s effort to curb private armed groups in the South.
The ARMM had an extensive general re-registration of voters in the entire
region from July 9-18 as part of the effort to remove multiple, underage and
non-existent registrants in the area’s old book of voters- an initial step meant
to ensure honest and peaceful May 2013 elections in the region. Past regional political exercises in the ARMM were marred by intimidation of
voters by private armed groups identified with political warlords, vote-buying,
and other irregularities. “You don’t just talk about the arms of the MILF, but also of everyone else.
That is part of normalization. How can you ask the MILF to completely disarm if
other groups or some families are armed?” Deles said in an emailed
statement. “We are looking for a real partnership among the government, the MILF, and
other governance constituencies to look at this matter on how to make life more
secure, to trust in the state forces to make them secure, and be engaged in
other productive activities,” she said. Deles said both parties would also work in partnership to reduce and control
firearms in the region.
A convenor of more than 50 peace advocacy outfits in Mindanao, Oblate priest
Eliseo Mercado, Jr. said involving the MILF in the government’s campaign against
Mindanao-based private armies and armed groups being employed by some clans as
“tools” for perpetuating power can also be a good “capacity building exposure”
for the rebel group. Mercado, executive director of the Institute for Autonomy and Governance,
said it is also good for the government and the MILF to start working together
in maintaining peace and order in many hostile areas while both sides are still
trying to iron out a final peace deal based on the objectives of the October 15,
2012 Framework Agreement on Bangsamoro, or FAB. Mercado said the government and MILF can cooperate on initiatives, including
community-organizing thrusts and settlement of conflicts involving Moro
families.
The FAB also aims to decommission guerilla forces and turn them into
productive sectors once a final GPH-MILF peace compact is achieved. “As put in the Bangsamoro Framework Agreement, decommissioning is phased and
calibrated and will start once political commitments are delivered…We agreed
that substantial decommissioning happens when the basic law is delivered,” Deles
said. She said a joint normalization committee will be formed between the parties
toward full decommissioning, and will be overseen by a third-party monitor
composed of domestic and international partners of the peace process. “It was understandable that for a movement like the MILF, which had been
fighting for so long, its members would have a different perspective on
decommissioning,” Deles said.
She said she is confident that decommissioning would be successful here as in
other countries. “As the fighters see this on the ground, peace is real, the land can be
cultivated, there is livelihood coming in, children can go to school, health
centers will be set up. It will be a matter of not just giving up something, but
(they) will also get a better life for (their) children,” she said. She said discussions on the decommissioning process are underway. Deles assured the public that the government is determined to deliver the
political commitments embodied in the FAB.
Major Gen. Caesar Ronnie Ordoyo, the commander of the Army’s 6th Infantry
Division in Central Mindanao, and the ARMM’s police director, Chief Supt. Mario
Avenido, both said they do not have any problem working with the MILF, with the
guidance of the government’s peace panel and OPAPP, in deactivating private
armed groups. Ordoyo said the 6th ID is ready to help in any initiative meant to address
the presence of armed partisans in the division’s so called “area of
responsibility,” or AOR.
Avenido said one security concern the ARMM police and the MILF can help
address together is the settlement of existing “rido,” or clan wars involving
political clans in the autonomous region. There are about a hundred standing family feuds involving in the ARMM, mostly
precipitated by land conflicts, affronts to clan pride and honor, and
politics. Avenido and his subordinate provincial police directors have settled more
than 30 clan wars in the past 12 months, according to reports obtained from the
ARMM regional police headquarters at Camp S.K. Pendatun town in
Maguindanao.
The ARMM covers Maguindanao and Lanao del Sur, both in mainland Mindanao, the
island provinces of Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, and the cities of Marawi and
Lamitan, where residents have a strong tradition of collecting firearms,
including military-type assault rifles and shoulder-fire grenade launchers, both
as "status symbol" and for protection from rival clans.
http://www.philstar.com/nation/2013/01/03/892881/milf-help-dismantling-private-armies-mindanao
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.