Once the Bangsamoro government is established, the MILF hopes to bring back the old glory of Camp Abubakar and make it a model of governance
It is Ramadan and
a Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) camp in Butig town, Lanao del Sur
appears deserted at about 9am.
The MILF camp is
located just a few kilometers away from the house of the town mayor. A few
kilometers away, a mosque with a gold-painted roof glistens in the morning sun.
MILF 2nd vice
chairman Alim Pangalian, also known as Alim Ali Solaiman, is based in this
camp.
He was was one of
the 3 MILF commanders – along with the late Ameril Umra Kato, founder of the
breakaway Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, and Abdullah "Commander
Bravo" Macapaar – who was accused of ordering attacks on communities in
North Cotabato and Lanao del Norte after the Memorandum on Agreement on Ancestral
Domains were struck down in 2008. Authorities offered a P5 million reward for
Pangalian's arrest.
He continues to
deny the accusations. He said he has never laid hands "not even a pinch on
anybody's life." He also denied allegations that he ordered his men to
burn down houses.
In his camp there
are no barbed wires or monitoring posts out in the open. Instead, rectangular
banners brandishing the word "Bangsamoro" adorn the fence surrounding
his office. Just across the gate is a covered multi-purpose space. Located nearby
is a pilot elementary school and a madrasah (Muslim school). A few meters away
are houses of MILF sympathizers.
In his office, a
map showing the proposed core areas of a new autonomous region to be known as
Bangsamoro occupies an entire wall.
On the first day
of Ramadan, Pangalian grants Rappler an interview. He wears an outfit befitting
of an imam to show, he said, that he is religious.
SATELLITE CAMP. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front community in Butig, Lanao del Sur is located a few kilometers away from the residence of the town mayor. Photo by Rappler
With the peace process with the MILF in advanced stages, the MILF leader is hardly a fugitive from the law nowadays.
Pangalian was
present when President Benigno Aquino III graced the symbolic turnover of 75 MILF firearms at the old capitol in
Sultan Kudarat town in the nearby province
of Maguindanao on June
16.
MILF and Camp Abubakar
He was one of the
MILF leaders who were able to visit Camp
Abubakar in Maguindanao
to see the storage facility for the decommissioned rebel firearms.
Camp Abubakar used to be the MILF's main camp until it was
overtaken by government forces during the 2000 all-out war.
It was in this
community where the rebel group – led by the late Salamat Hashim – ran a system
of government based on the Shari'ah law – living out their vision for what an
independent nation under the MILF would be like. The MILF agreed to drop its
call for secession when it entered into talks with the Aquino government.
MILF chief
negotiator Mohagher Iqbal has said that the camp was chosen as the location to
store MILF firearms due to its symbolism – from bearing the stigma of war, it
will now serve as an icon for reconciliation.
The symbolic
turnover of firearms to the Independent Decommissioning Body marked the first
time that Pangalian was able to return to what was once the rebel's mother
camp.
He said he is
"happy" that event allowed him to visit their former stronghold –
made even more special by the fact that it came days before Ramadan.
SYMBOLIC. The storage facility in Camp Abubakar, also known as Camp Iranun, in Maguindanao is secured by a joint team from the Moro Isamic Liberation Front and the government, and supervised by the Independent Decommissioning Body. Photo from OPAPP
Pangalian revealed that under the normalization agreement, the government agreed to remove soldiers from
Under the peace
deal signed in March 2014, the government committed to redeploy armed troops
assigned in Bangsamoro core areas while the decommissioning process is ongoing.
Meanwhile, MILF
camps would be turned into civilian communities.
Once the
Bangsamoro government is established, the MILF hopes to bring back the old
glory of Camp Abubakar and make it a model of
governance, Pangalian said.
"If ever Camp Abubakar
will be returned to us, then we're going to make a community out of it. Build
houses for the mujahideens (fighters), and schools and mosques for the
children. We'll make it productive and useful. We could be a role model and a
guide for them to see how good leadership accomplishes tasks," Pangalian
said in Maranao.
But there is a
long way to go. Pangalian is aware that there are many who doubt the sincerity
of the MILF.
Asked about the
wide perception that Moros cannot live without guns, Pangalian said:
"Those are simply allegations by judgmental people who have not yet known
the real and whole story about how and why Moro people live like this," he
said.
It was difficult
to convince the first 145 MILF combatants to decommission due to fears that the
process would be tantamount to surrender. MILF chairperson Murad Ebrahim
earlier said they explained to their men that the firearms would be turned over
to a third-party body and not to the government. The process would also signal
the return to mainstream life, not surrender. (READ: 'Old comrades' return to
civilian life)
Under the peace
accord, the decommissioning process is staggered and depends on political
commitments. Because of this, the MILF will not decommission if the BBL is not
passed and the proposed Bangsamoro government is established.
But what if the
BBL is passed and yet the content of the BBL is diluted? (READ: 4 scenarios if Bangsamoro bill
is not passed)
The MILF
leadership has been consistent in saying that it will not accept a law that
renders the Bangsamoro less powerful than the current Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao.
Will the MILF
then resort to war? Pangalian gave an answer consistent with rest of the MILF
leadership – that the group will continue to talk peace.
"We have
already removed in our vocabularies the word war," Pangalian said.
What he is also
hoping for is that a general amnesty for MILF rebels would be implemented.
Since the war began in the 70s, about 150,000 individuals, including
combatants, police, soldiers, and civilians, have been killed.
"If you were
wondering, why are we hiding or staying in a deep and faraway jungle when we
have just enough place for us to stay in the city? Is it because we are guilty
of something, are we hiding something or we’re not considered a true Bangsamoro
people, are we uncivilized for living in the jungle? The answer to that
questions my dear children is simply because there is no such thing as what we
call justice for the Bangsamoro. That’s why," he said.
In Butig, the
relative calm in the warm June morning is betrayed by sights of burned down
houses. The town, after all, is one of the areas that bore the brunt of the
all-out war during the Estrada administration.
Rido
It is not only
the months-long hostilities that have plagued the town. Rido or clan
wars are also a culprit.
In one corner, a
row of houses destroyed by gunfire due to a conflict between two families serve
as testaments to the complex and volatile peace in the area. To stop the fight,
a PNP detachment was set up in the middle of the houses of the warring clans.
The conflict has been resolved but the burned down houses remain deserted.
RUINS. One of the houses destroyed by rido or clan wars in Butig, Lanao del Sur. Photo by Rappler
When the MILF decommissions, what would happen to other groups who own firearms?
According to
Pangalian, if the proposed BBL will pass, the MILF leadership will negotiate
with these groups and convince them to turn over their arms. They could sell
their firearms and use the money to perform Hajj in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
or invest it in business.
"We are
pretty much confident that we could do these things easily without having any
mishaps," he said.
When
congressional sessions resume in July, Pangalian's appeal to Congress is for
lawmakers to get on with work that would allow for "harmonious
existence."
"One Moro
nation, one Moro consciousness. One country, one love," he said. "We
still belong and live in the Philippines
and we are Filipino."
http://www.rappler.com/move-ph/issues/mindanao/97853-milf-leader-we-removed-war-vocabulary
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