This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 11, April 22-28, 2007
Massacres by Soldiers
Provoked Latest Clash, MNLF Leader Says
A series of massacres of
civilians in Sulu, including those of two grandchildren of an MNLF leader,
provoked the latest wave of fighting between government troops and the Moro
revolutionary group.
BY ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO Last Feb. 17, Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF) state chairman Khaid Ajibon sent two grandsons of his on
an errand to the market in Indanan, Sulu. Upon their return, soldiers fired at
them. One of the children was killed. Eight days later, Scout
Rangers bombarded the MNLF headquarters in Indanan, where Ajibon is based. On April 25, Scout Rangers
massacred a family of 10 in Timpuok, Patikul, Sulu. Only one of the family's
members managed to survive. These incidents are what
provoked the latest wave of fighting between the Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP) and the MNLF, Bangsamoro People’s National Congress (BPNC) chairman Ustadz
Zain Jali told Bulatlat in an interview this week. “Because of these, (MNLF
commander) Ustadz Habier Malik has had enough,” Jali said. “He cannot take these
anymore.” At around 6 a.m. on April
14, MNLF forces led by Malik attacked the detachment of the 11th Marine
Battalion Landing Team in Tayungan, Panamao, Sulu. The assault left two soldiers
dead and eight others wounded. Before the series of
massacres that provoked the latest wave of clashes, Malik and his men had
“detained” a group led by Muslim convert Marine Maj. Gen. Benjamin Dolorfino in
Jolo, Sulu. That was on Feb. 2-4. Dolorfino, who also uses
the name Ben Muhammad, went with Undersecretary for Peace Ramon Santos and 13
others to the MNLF’s Camp Jabal Ubod in Panamao, Sulu in the morning of Feb. 2
to talk with MNLF representatives headed by Malik. The group included two
colonels, a junior officer, nine enlisted men, and several members of Santos’
staff. The talks were to tackle
the holding of a tripartite meeting, proposed late last year by the MNLF, with
the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the Organization of
Islamic Conference. In the afternoon of that
same day, Dolorfino and his group were prevented from leaving the camp.
“General Dolorfino and his
group were asked why the tripartite meeting had been postponed again, and
Undersecretary Santos could not give any answer,” Jolo Councilor Cocoy Tulawie
told Bulatlat in an earlier interview. “So they were prevented from leaving
until the GRP and the OIC agreed to schedule a meeting for March 17.” The proposed tripartite
meeting was to tackle issues related to the 1996 Final Peace Agreement between
the GRP and the MNLF. The meeting scheduled for
March 17 was to be a preliminary meeting in preparation for the tripartite
meeting. “It didn’t push through,” Jali revealed. The Armed Forces of the
Philippines (AFP) is accusing the MNLF of coddling members of the bandit Abu
Sayyaf Group (ASG) – an accusation that the Moro revolutionary group has
vehemently denied. “There is one group of
people in Sulu tipping off others as ‘terrorists’ or ‘terrorist coddlers’ to the
military, just for the bounty,” Jali disclosed. “That is why the military has
these accusations against the MNLF.
Displacement The fighting has displaced
more than 40,000 civilians in Sulu. Some of the evacuees have been relocated at
the Panglima Mamah Elementary School in Tagbak, Indanan, Sulu. The rest are in
Jolo, the provincial capital – where there are no evacuation centers. “There are no sanitary
conditions (in the evacuation center),” Jali told Bulatlat. “The dangers of
epidemics breaking out there are very high.” In a separate interview,
Moro-Christian People’s Alliance (MCPA) secretary-general Amirah Ali Lidasan
confirmed this. “Within the confines of the
evacuation centers, the refugees catch different diseases,” Lidasan, who is also
one of the nominees of the Suara Bangsamoro (Voice of the Moro People) Party,
said. “And the food is never enough for all of them.” Flashback The MNLF traces its origins
to a massacre of between 28 and 64 Moro fighters recruited by the government in
1968 for a scheme to occupy Sabah, an island near Mindanao to which the
Philippines has a historic claim. Sabah ended up in the hands
of the Malaysian government during the presidency of Diosdado Macapagal
(1961-1965). His successor Ferdinand Marcos conceived a scheme involving the
recruitment of Moro fighters to occupy the island. The recruits were summarily
executed by their military superiors in 1968, in what is now known as the
infamous Jabidah Massacre. The Jabidah Massacre
triggered widespread outrage among the Moros and led to the formation of the
MNLF that same year. The MNLF waged an armed revolutionary struggle against the
GRP for an independent Muslim state in Mindanao. The Marcos government,
weighed down by the costs of the Mindanao war, negotiated for peace and signed
an agreement with the MNLF in Tripoli, Libya in the mid-1970s. The pact involved
the grant of autonomy to the Mindanao Muslims. Negotiations between the
GRP and the MNLF went on and off until 1996, when the two parties signed a Final
Peace Agreement which created the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) as
a concession to the group. Sulu is one of four
provinces under the ARMM: the others are Basilan, Maguindanao, and Tawi-Tawi. In October 2001,
hostilities broke out anew between the GRP and the MNLF. The military was in hot
pursuit of Abu Sayyaf bandits who had 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. MNLF founding chairman Nur Misuari, a former
political science professor at the University of the Philippines (UP) who was
then ARMM governor, said the Talipao Massacre was a “violation” of the 1996
Peace Agreement. Misuari, 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) and charged with rebellion. He is
currently under house arrest in New Manila, Quezon City while still facing
rebellion charges. Since 2001, there has been
sporadic fighting between the AFP and the MNLF. The waves of fighting have
invariably been provoked by massacres of Moro civilians by soldiers, Jali said.
“Our people are always
being massacred,” he said. Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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