From a distance

WE ARE REPRINTING this article originally titled “MILF guerrillas watch from a distance as PNP Board of Inquiry visits encounter site” first published on the website of MindaNews on February 25, 2015.

SITIO ALILING, Tukanalipao, Mamasapano, Maguindanao (MindaNews / 25 Feb) –“Tingnan nyo, basta may coordinate,wala talagang problema(See, if there’s coordination, there is really no problem), Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) commander Haramen said as he and his men watched from behind a row of banana plants on Tuesday while members of the Board of Inquiry of the Philippine National Police (PNP) led by Director Benjamin Magalong walked across the cornfields where 35 of the 44 slain members of the Special Action Force (SAF) were found on January 25.

Unknown to the newly-arrived visitors, Haramen, operations commander of the 7thBrigade of the 105thbase command of the MILF’s Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF), and his men – all of them armed – were, earlier that morning, mingling near the river with members of the PNP who were serving as the advance security team. By noon, across the river, elements of the Armed Forces of the Philippines who helped escort Magalong’s team would line up to stand guard when the BOI team arrived.

Click on the photo to read the full article on the MindaNews website.

A MEMBER of the MILF's Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces watches from a distance from under the shade of a banana plant the arrival of the Philippine National Police's Board of Inquiry on Tuesday, February 24, at the cornfields where the bodies of 35 of the 44 slain SAF members were found. MindaNews photo by TOTO LOZANO

A MEMBER of the MILF’s Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces watches from a distance from under the shade of a banana plant the arrival of the Philippine National Police’s Board of Inquiry on Tuesday, February 24, at the cornfields where the bodies of 35 of the 44 slain SAF members were found. MindaNews photo by TOTO LOZANO

Don’t hold the BBL hostage

Civil society groups, peace advocates call on solons

REPRESENTATIVES of civil society organizations from Mindanao appealed to members of the Philippine legislature not to hold hostage the deliberations on the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law following the Mamasapano incident in Maguindanao province.

Forty-four members of the Philippine National Police-Special Action Force, 18 Moro Islamic Liberation front fighters, and five civilians died in the police-led operations codenamed Oplan Exodus. It aimed to kill or capture two foreign bombmakers declared as terrorists by the United States government.

However, lawyer Mary Anne Arnado, secretary general of the Mindanao People’s Caucus (MPC) stressed that this does not mean that investigation on the bloody “misencounter” between the Philippine National Police-Special Action Force (PNP-SAF) and armed groups in the area should stop.

“The (probe on the) Mamasapano incident should proceed; we want to know the truth… we are not preventing anyone to investigate,” she said.

THE CALL IS CLEAR: Members of civil society with their message to members of the Philippine Senate and House of Representatives | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

THE CALL IS CLEAR: Members of civil society with their message to members of the Philippine Senate and House of Representatives | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

“But the thing is, it should not be used as a reason, justification, to suspend or derail the peace process with the MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front) which is now in the process of implementation,” Arnado told the PCIJ.

At least 6,000 residents have fled their homes in Mamasapano town after the January 25 incident.

Sister Arnold Maria Noel, spokesperson of the Free Cocoy Tulawie Movement, feared that the suspension on the deliberations of the BBL might lead to more bloody incidents like the Mamasapano incident.

Huwag natin i-hostage ang BBL dahil sa Mamasapano kasi kung hindi natin mapasa itong BBL baka ilang beses pa yung Mamasapano incident. Ngayon kasi ang nangyari dahil sa Mamasapano nahinto na yung deliberations ng BBL. Na-hostage mo yung BBL dahil sa isang incident,” Noel said.

Datuan Magon of the United Youth for Peace and Development, on the other hand, said the investigation on the incident and the deliberation of the BBL should be treated separately since the two are not related.

THE MILF has been talking peace with the government for 17 years - Aga Khan Sharieff | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

THE MILF has been talking peace with the government for 17 years – Aga Khan Sharieff | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

Aga Khan Sharieff, chairman of the Bangsamoro National Movement for Peace and Development, agreed with Magon citing the fact that there have been no armed encounters between government troops and the MILF over the three years since President Benigno S. Aquino III sat down to negotiate with the MILF.

Ang MILF, 17 years na nakikipag usap sa gobyerno. Sinabi doon sa report, tatlong taon mula noong umupo si PNoy walang encounter na nangyari sa pagitan ng MILF at saka ang gobyerno natin. Noong panahon ni Erap (Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada), 989 encounters.

Sharieff also reiterated that MILF does not own the BBL and is not intended to appease the revolutionary group.

Bigyan po natin ng lugar ang BBL na maitatag. Hindi po ‘yan pag-aari ng MILF dahil (may) plebesito tapos (sa) 2016 mag e-eleksyon,” he said.

Photo by Cong B. Corrales

Photo by Cong B. Corrales

Arnado also pointed to the fact that members of the Bangsamoro Ad Hoc Committee have already gone around Moro communities in Mindanao for the public hearings and have told people that the law will be passed “within the timeline as agreed in the peace agreement.”

“It is very worrisome at this point when we hear our legislators saying this is already suspended and the reason is because of the Mamasapano (incident). This could not be understood at the ground level,” Arnado said.

The representatives of civil society organizations from Mindanao held a news conference during a two-day gathering in Manila of peace advocates from across Asia. Dubbed “Defying Extremism: Asian Dialogue,” it carried the theme, “Civil society voices; discourse and action for peace.” | Cong B. Corrales

7 business groups speak out: ‘Let chips fall where they may’

SEVEN MAJOR business chambers and associations on Wednesday issued a carefully but strongly worded joint statement expressed “utmost respect and sympathies” to the families of the policemen, Moro fighters, civilians who died in Mamasapano, Maguindao last month.

At the same time, they joined the national clamor for “truth and accountability” for the incident, and urged President Aquino and all parties involved “to put the peace process back on track at the earliest time possible.”

“It seems inevitable,” however, “that President Aquino, as Commander-in-Chief, ultimately will have no choice but to render a full accounting on Mamasapano to the Filipino people.”

“Let the chips fall where they may, but too much is at stake for silence to be invoked for the protection of old friends and allies,” they added.

“Only with a full and satisfactory accounting will justice be possible, and only after justice has been satisfied can the peace process get back on track based on the trust and confidence that is needed of both parties.”

The groups spurned calls by some politicians for an all-out war in Mindanao,” saying citizens must “not allow political manipulation to take advantage of legitimate emotion and grief to the point of trumping reason and endangering the gains we have made over the last few years.”

“In the midst of national mourning,” they lamented, “certain sectors and political players have openly called for all-out war in Mindanao, branded our brother and sister Muslim Filipinos as terrorists, cast doubt on the Bangsamoro Peace Process and the sincerity of the negotiators, and vigorously demanded the resignation of the President.”

“As members of the Philippine business community we do not and will not support such calls. WE CALL INSTEAD FOR SOBRIETY, COURAGE, AND UNITY.”

The full text of the statement signed by the Cagayan de Oro Chamber of Commerce and Industry Foundation, Inc., Employers Confederation of the Philippines, Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines, Makati Business Club, Management Association of the Philippines, Mindanao Business Council, and Philippine Business for Social Progress follows:

A TIME FOR SOBRIETY, COURAGE, AND UNITY

We, the undersigned business organizations, express our utmost respect and sympathies for the families of the gallant policemen of the PNP Special Action Force, as we extend our sympathies to the families of our brother Muslim Filipinos and the innocent civilians who perished as a result of the tragic encounter at Mamasapano, Maguindanao. We join the Filipino people in our grief over this tragedy and in the call for truth and accountability over this incident.

In the midst of national mourning, certain sectors and political players have openly called for all-out war in Mindanao, branded our brother and sister Muslim Filipinos as terrorists, cast doubt on the Bangsamoro Peace Process and the sincerity of the negotiators, and vigorously demanded the resignation of the President.

As members of the Philippine business community we do not and will not support such calls. WE CALL INSTEAD FOR SOBRIETY, COURAGE, AND UNITY.

The Philippines has achieved much under the stewardship of President Aquino and his government: The administration’s credible campaign to restore integrity and good governance has gained traction and the respect not only of Philippine business but also the international investment community. Our conduct of international diplomacy and our insistence on the settlement of disputes through the rule of law have gained for our country unprecedented admiration and respect in the community of nations. From being Asia’s perpetual laggard in the last decade, we are now among the region’s fastest growing countries and our rapidly expanding economy is now the envy of our neighbors. Once ignored by international investors and tourists, we have re-established ourselves as an attractive business and leisure destination. From a people cynical and lethargic at our lack of progress and purpose, Filipinos are once again vigilant and assertive in national discourse.

We must not allow political manipulation to take advantage of legitimate emotion and grief to the point of trumping reason and endangering the gains we have made over the last few years. Rather than foster division among ourselves, we must channel our energies and efforts towards unity, reconciliation, and a genuine search for the truth, fully insulated from selfish political agendas.

We reaffirm our support for the Aquino administration and the Bangsamoro Peace Process. There is no other answer to the aspirations of the Bangsamoro people but total and lasting peace. It is in this context that we appeal to the Aquino administration and all parties involved to put the peace process back on track at the earliest time possible.

We fully realise, however, that the facts surrounding Mamasapano must still be satisfactorily established and justice must be dispensed where it is due. We therefore appeal to all the parties conducting inquiries— the PNP, the AFP, the MILF, the DOJ and both houses of Congress— to complete their inquiries at the earliest time possible and render their reports to the nation. Whether these inquiries will lead to clear conclusions and the satisfactory dispensation of justice, or simply add even more to the prevailing anger and confusion, only time will tell. It, however, seems inevitable that President Aquino, as Commander-in-Chief, ultimately will have no choice but to render a full accounting on Mamasapano to the Filipino people. Let the chips fall where they may, but too much is at stake for silence to be invoked for the protection of old friends and allies. Only with a full and satisfactory accounting will justice be possible, and only after justice has been satisfied can the peace process get back on track based on the trust and confidence that is needed of both parties.

At a critical juncture in our history, we have a golden opportunity to preserve our gains and use them as a platform to put the country on an irreversible path towards inclusive development and political maturity. We cannot afford to squander 56 months of institutionalizing reforms, weeding out corruption, and solidifying our economic and social foundations.

Let us move forward with sobriety and courage as one united Filipino nation in search of Justice and Peace.

SIGNATORIES:
Cagayan de Oro Chamber of Commerce and Industry Foundation, Inc.
Employers Confederation of the Philippines
Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines
Makati Business Club
Management Association of the Philippines
Mindanao Business Council
Philippine Business for Social Progress

Going beyond biases

ON February 16, 2015, the Ateneo Human Rights Center and the Committee on Human Rights of the House of Representatives held a forum on the planned creation of the Bangsamoro Human Rights Commission.

The creation of the body is contained in the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law, the discussions for which was suspended by both the House of Representatives and the Senate after the Mamasapano incident on January 25, 2015 in the province of Maguindanao.

Forty-four members of the Philippine National Police-Special Action Force, 18 Moro Islamic Liberation front fighters, and five civilians died in the police-led operations codenamed Oplan Exodus. It aimed to kill or capture two foreign bombmakers declared as terrorists by the United States government.

THERE is a need to go beyond biases, says CHR chair Loretta Ann P. Rosales, left, during a forum held on February 16, 2015. Also in photo are lawyers Raissa Jajurie and Mohammad Al-amin Julkipli, both members of the legal team of the GPH panel in talks with the MILF | Photo by Ghessa

THERE is a need to go beyond biases, says CHR chair Loretta Ann P. Rosales, left, during a forum held on February 16, 2015. Also in photo are lawyers Raissa Jajurie and Mohammad Al-amin Julkipli, both members of the legal team of the GPH panel in talks with the MILF | Photo by Ghessa

In this video short produced by PCIJ deputy producer Cong B. Corrales, resource persons took turns stressing the need for a separate body that will uphold and protect human rights in the Bangsamoro.

Commission on Human Rights chair Loretta Ann P. Rosales pointed out the need to rethink perceptions about the Moro people because these “distorted reflections” indicate a lack of knowledge and information, prejudices and biases against them.

View the video to see more about the forum. Let us know what you think. Your comments and suggestions are welcome on our comments box below.

Happy weekend!