A transition commission pressed for time submits a draft law without the parts on the police structure for the political entity, automatic block grants, special development fund, and Bangsamoro waters
The Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) submitted to Malacañang a draft law for the proposed Bangsamoro political entity on Monday afternoon, April 14, but it's incomplete.
In an ambush interview
at Mendiola before his scheduled meeting with Undersecretary Mike Musngi in Malacañang,
BTC chairman Mohagher Iqbal admitted that the partial draft has yet to
incorporate details on:
- the 156-page recommendation of the Independent Commission on
Policing for the structure of the police force for the
Bangsamoro
- automatic block grants
- special development fund
- Bangsamoro waters
These documents would be
submitted afterwards, Iqbal said.
Malacañang confirmed it
received the partial draft at around 7:45 pm Monday.
The draft law will be
reviewed by the Office of the President before it is transmitted to Congress
and certified as urgent by the President.
Watch this video below:[Video: Incomplete Bangsamoro draft law sent to Aquino
This sets the stage for the second phase of the peace process with the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which is an equally difficult one:
congressional approval of a planned political structure that aims to replace
the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, and a plebiscite after to determine
which towns or provinces would be under its control.
[Video: Iqbal: Draft basic law submitted to Malacañang not yet completehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-D09Zg5OBqM]
The first phase was last month's signing of the peace agreement between the government and the MILF, which aims to end more than 4 decades of armed conflict in
But the process continues to face challenges.
Friction within
BTC?
A source privy to BTC
matters said some commissioners nominated by the government were not satisfied
with how the affairs of the MILF-dominated BTC were being conducted.
Some commissioners were
complaining that some protocols set by the commission in the drafting of the
law were not being followed, the same source said.
For instance, the
partial draft submitted to Malacañang had yet to be signed by all members of
the commission since it is not yet complete.
In a Mindanews report,
Iqbal, who also served as the chief negotiator of the MILF during the peace
talks, denied that the Bangsamoro Basic Law was being railroaded.
“Hindi naman (No). Do you think the commissioners will
agree to a railroad?” he told MindaNews.
Iqbal did not respond to
Rappler's text asking whether the initial draft of the basic law will be
released to the public.
Upon missing its self-imposed
deadline to submit the draft on March 31 - just 4 days after the signing of the
Comprehensive Agreement on the
Bangsamoro – the BTC released a statement
saying it has "established a working arrangement with the Office of the
President" on the submission of the draft.
On proposals to
amend Constitution
Under the final peace
pact and Executive Order 120,
the BTC is allowed to recommend amendments to the 1987 Constitution
"whenever necessary."
Iqbal said the BTC has
agreed to submit a separate document for provisions that would require
constitutional amendments.
"There is now a
consensus among the commission of the BTC that there would a separate paper for
those that would require amending the constitution but the draft would be a
separate document," Iqbal said.
It remains to be seen
how the proposed amendments will be incorporated in the draft law to be
submitted to Congress. Already, Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago
considers the peace agreement illegal.
Malacañang said it hopes
to finish evaluating the draft law when Congress resumes session by May.
Both the government and
the MILF hope to install the new Bangsamoro government by 2016, before the
President steps down.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/55482-incomplete-bangsamoro-draft-law-aquino
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