This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 46, January 1-7, 2006
Yearend Report
MORO PEOPLE
2005 among Worst Years in Bangsa Moro History
The year 2005 is most likely one of the worst years in Bangsa Moro history. It
was a year of false hopes for peace amid an escalation of a centuries-old
strife. If anything, the year 2005 will be remembered as the year peace in
Mindanao appeared near enough but was driven farther away.
BY ALEXANDER
MARTIN REMOLLINO
The
year 2005 is most likely one of the worst years in Bangsa Moro history. It was a
year of false hopes for peace amid an escalation of a centuries-old strife.
At
the opening of a two-day consultation among its leaders and members, Al Haj
Murad, chair of the revolutionary Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), said
that peace in
Mindanao
is no longer a pipe dream.
“Today is the day we can tell the Bangsa Moro and all peace-loving people of our
homeland that just, honorable and lasting peace is partly at hand,” Murad had
said. “Today is the day the next generation of Bangsa Moro will remember as the
day the MILF and the Philippine government announced to the world at large that
it is not impossible to solve seemingly irreconcilable issues as long as
negotiating parties approach the table with open mind and sincerity.”
The
MILF, which has been waging an armed struggle for an Islamic state in
Mindanao,
signed a ceasefire agreement with the Government of the Republic of the
Philippines (GRP) in 2001 and is currently in the thick of peace negotiations
with the latter. Both the GRP and the MILF declared the peace talks to have
reached a breakthrough in 2005, but neither party divulged to the public any
details.
However, this breakthrough is in serious danger of being compromised due to the
military’s accusation in mid-December that the MILF violated the ceasefire
agreement. The military has threatened to file a protest with the GRP peace
panel on the matter.
“We
maintain what we say and we have documents to back our reports about the MILF
violations of the ceasefire,” said Col. Domingo Tutaan, chief of staff of the
military’s Southern Command (Southcom). “They continue to recruit and train
rebels in
Mindanao.”
“We
continue to observe and support the primacy of the peace process,” Tutaan
continued, “but the military also has to perform its mandate for the conduct of
internal security.”
Southcom chief Lt. Gen. Edilberto Adan, citing intelligence reports, said that
the MILF
recruited as many as 8,000 fighters in eight provinces in
Mindanao.
The
military also said that the MILF has links with the terrorist Jemaah Islamiyah
and al-Qaeda groups.
The
MILF – whose operations cover the provinces of
North Cotabato,
Maguindanao, and Sultan Kudarat – has denied the accusations and stated in
various media interviews that the military is trying to scuttle the peace talks,
which they describe as now being in its final stages.
Precarious breakthrough
It
was a precarious breakthrough to begin with. As Islamic Studies scholar Dr.
Julkipli Wadi told Bulatlat in an interview last June, “The key word
there is ‘partly.’ Peace is partly at hand, but there is still a long way to go.
They have not started to talk about the most crucial issues yet.”
When
Murad made his declaration, the two parties had not even begun to talk about
governance which Wadi described as the most crucial issue in the negotiations
since it is where the GRP would have to lay down what it has to offer the MILF.
And
the GRP had nothing to offer the MILF except the Autonomous Region in Muslim
Mindanao (ARMM), as Wadi and Rev. Absalom Cerveza, spokesperson of the Moro
National Liberation Front (MNLF) peace panel, said in separate interviews with
Bulatlat.
The
ARMM – which includes Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Basilan, and Maguindanao – is a product
of the 1996 peace agreement between the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)
and the GRP, which sought to end the MNLF’s 27-year armed struggle for a
separate state.
During the presidency of the late Diosdado Macapagal (1961-1965),
Sabah, an island near
Mindanao
to which the
Philippines has a historic claim, ended up in the hands of the Malaysian
government.
During his first presidential term, the late Ferdinand Marcos approved the
recruitment of between 28 and 64 Moro fighters to occupy
Sabah. The recruits were summarily executed by their military superiors in 1968,
in what is now known as the infamous Jabidah Massacre. According to Moro
historian Salah Jubair, this was because the recruits refused to follow orders.
The
Jabidah Massacre triggered widespread outrage among the Moros and led to the
formation of the MNLF that same year.
The
MNLF entered into a series of negotiations with the GRP, beginning in the 1970s
under the Marcos government. The implementation of the Tripoli Agreement signed
in 1978 led to the breakaway from the MNLF of a group led by Dr. Salamat Hashim
which eventually became the MILF. In 1996, the MNLF signed a Final Peace
Agreement with the GRP which created the ARMM as a concession to the group.
Wadi
and Cerveza said that the government seems bent on removing MNLF presence in the
ARMM so that it can give the area to the MILF.
A
peace violated
Indeed, there was an outbreak of hostilities in Sulu in October 2001. That year,
the military was in hot pursuit of Abu Sayyaf bandits who abducted tourists in
Sipadan,
Malaysia.
At
one point, the military had announced the defeat of an Abu Sayyaf contingent in
Talipao, Sulu. The MNLF, however, said that it was its guerrillas, not Abu
Sayyaf bandits, who were killed by the military.
The
massacre in Talipao led the MNLF, just five years after signing a peace
agreement with the government, to once more take up arms. Misuari, who was then
ARMM governor, said the Talipao massacre was a violation of the 1996 peace
agreement.
The
MNLF leader, who was then in Malaysia, ended up being arrested and subsequently
detained in a military camp in Sta. Rosa, Laguna (38 kms. south of Manila). He
has since been deprived of access to the media, and has recently been prohibited
from using a mobile phone.
Since 2001, military operations in Sulu have been continuous.
The
massacre of the Padiwan family in Maimbong, Sulu in March 2005 and a military
bombing just 500 meters away from the official residence of MNLF state chairman
Khaib Ajibon in November 2005 triggered an escalation of the fighting. Both
operations have been defended by the military as having been carried out in
pursuit of Abu Sayyaf bandits, even as the MNLF has vehemently denied coddling
any bandits or terrorists.
Between the massacre of the Padiwan family and the November attack near Ajibon’s
camp, there was also an unfortunate incident that did not help the Macapagal-Arroyo
government convince the Bangsa Moro of its declared sincerity in finding a
peaceful resolution of the Mindanao conflict.
On
March 15, 27 inmates of Camp Bagong Diwa in Bicutan, Taguig, Metro Manila died
in what the Philippine National Police (PNP) described as an shootout triggered
by a jailbreak attempt by prisoners belonging to the Abu Sayyaf.
But
one of the prisoners, who spoke to Bulatlat on condition of anonymity,
said that only six of the 27 casualties were armed. This gave rise to suspicions
that what happened was not a shootout, but a rubout of Muslim prisoners – many
of whom had been arrested on mere suspicion of maintaining “terrorist” links.
Still far off
If
anything, the year 2005 will be remembered as the year peace in Mindanao
appeared near enough but was driven farther away.
The
GRP’s tactic of trying to pit the MILF against the MNLF to win peace with the
former is not working. Instead of being cowed, the MNLF has been fighting back
with a vengeance. Meanwhile, the MILF is getting wary of the government’s
actions – which could lead to a total loss of faith, on its part, with the peace
process.
The
Macapagal-Arroyo government is thus creating more instead of fewer enemies in
Mindanao. That Muslims have been suffering increased discrimination amid the
U.S.-led war on “terror” is not helping the government any.
Because of these, peace in Mindanao – which has eluded the Bangsa Moro since the
advent of colonialism in the Philippines – remains elusive. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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