MILF: ‘If you were in our shoes’

THE Moro Islamic Liberation Front has published an editorial on its website about the encounter in Mamasapano, Maguindanao. Forty-four members of the Special Action Force who were part of an operation to kill or capture Basit Usman and Zulkifli bin Hir alias “Marwan,” linked to the international terrorist group al Qaeda, died in the January 25 incident.

The United States government has declared Marwan and Usman as “terrorists” and have placed them under the wanted list of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

If you were in the shoes of the MILF, what will you do at that precise moment of uncertainty and tense situation? Already there was fierce firefight in not a distant village; and it was 4:00am, the darkest part of the night. Would anyone in his right mind consider armed intruders, whom they never expected, as still friends? – MILF editorial

“The law of the hour was to shoot or be shot at or kill or be killed. Who fired first is a chicken and egg question,” the MILF said in the editorial published February 8, 2015 on its website luwaran.net.

Click on photo to read the full editorial on luwaran.net.

MILF flag

Another MILF editorial was titled “Is justice one-sided in this country?”

The MILF has come into full grips of the serious backlash of that tragic incident in Mamasapano, Maguindanao last January 25 where 44 members of the Special Action Force (SAF) of the Philippine National Police (PNP) died during a “misencounter” with MILF forces, who in turn suffered 18 dead and 14 wounded. Civilian casualties are yet to be accounted for. It is natural that emotions would fly fast and intense especially from the SAFs’ kith and kin.

Luwaran also reported that peace rallies are being held in Mindanao calling for the immediate passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law.

Click on photo to read the full report.

PHOTO from luwaran.net.

PHOTO from luwaran.net.

The MILF is also calling for the immediate passage of a “good BBL” in another editorial posted on its website.

Click here to read the editorial in full.

 

MILF’s Iqbal to attend Senate probe?

THE chief negotiator of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front might attend today’s Senate hearing on the Mamasapano incident, the vice-chairman of the MILF said.

“Posible pong umattend siya bukas sa hearing ng senado, God-willing. Tignan natin kung matuloy ‘yung kanyang pagdalo bukas,” Ghadzali Jaafar was quoted as saying in a report on GMA News online.

Click here to read full report.

PRESIDENT Benigno S. Aquino III offers a moment of silent prayer before the remains of the fallen Philippine National Police-Special Action Force (PNP-SAF) Troopers during the Necrological Service at the NCRPO Multi-Purpose Center of Camp Bagong Diwa in Bicutan, Taguig City on Friday (January 30, 2015) | Photo by Gil Nartea / Malacañang Photo Bureau

PRESIDENT Benigno S. Aquino III offers a moment of silent prayer before the remains of the fallen Philippine National Police-Special Action Force (PNP-SAF) Troopers during the Necrological Service at the NCRPO Multi-Purpose Center of Camp Bagong Diwa in Bicutan, Taguig City on Friday (January 30, 2015) | Photo by Gil Nartea / Malacañang Photo Bureau

The MILF had been subject of criticisms lately after members of the elite Special Action Force clashed with its fighters and several other armed groups in the village of Tukalinapao. Forty-four members of the counter-insurgency SAF were killed.

The SAF troopers were part of an exclusively police force that carried out Oplan Exodus to kill or capture two high-value targets: Basit Usman and Zulkifli bin Hir alias “Marwan” who are linked to the international terrorist group al Qaeda.

Marwan was killed in the operation while Usman escaped.

Several lawmakers have already withdrawn their support for the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law currently being discussed in the Senate and Lower House after the incident. The MILF had been negotiating peace with the Aquino government and had forged a landmark agreement only last year.

KIA, ID, IB, AHJAG, WIA?

ID, IB, AHJAG – these were some of the acronyms mentioned by resource persons during the hearings of joint committees of the Senate on the Mamasapano incident. We have compiled the most-repeated acronyms and their meanings

GPH: Government of the Philippines: It is a presidential, representative, and democratic republic where the President of the Philippines is both the head of state and the head of government within a pluriform multi-party system. The government has three interdependent branches: the legislative branch, the executive branch, and the judicial branch.

IMAGE FROM www.gov.ph

IMAGE FROM www.gov.ph

PNP-SAF: Philippine National Police-Special Action Force: It is the country’s commando unit tasked to conduct operations as a Rapid Deployment Force anywhere in the country. Its functions include counter terrorism operations against local and international terrorist groups, hostage rescue operations of national or of international significance, search and rescue operations in times of calamities, disaster and national emergencies, and civil disturbance management (CDM) during mass actions in support to local police units.

IMAGE FROM www.saf.pnp.gov.ph

IMAGE FROM www.saf.pnp.gov.ph

AFP: Armed Forces of the Philippines: Formally organized during the American Commonwealth era through the National Defense Act of 1935, the AFP is composed of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. It is a volunteer force, in that its manpower is derived from volunteers rather than by conscription or mandatory service.

IMAGE FROM afp.gov.ph

IMAGE FROM afp.gov.ph

ID: Infantry Division: An infantry division is a large military unit or formation. This formation consists of between 10,000 and 30,000 soldiers. A division is composed of several regiments or brigades. Several divisions make up a corps.

IB: Infantry Brigade: This is a line unit under a division of the Philippine Army. This unit typically consists of about 1,500 to 4,000 soldiers.

MILF: Moro Islamic Liberation Front: A breakaway group of the Moro National Liberation Front in 1977, this organization was formally established in 1984. It originally demanded independence from the government of the Philippines but on September 23, 2010, Mohagher Iqbal modified the groups demand to a Muslim substate, likened to a United States state-system.

The group is currently negotiating with the GPH.

BIAF: Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces: This is the armed-wing of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. Under the Comprehensive Agreement on Bangsamoro (CAB), the MILF has agreed to decommission this unit.

BIFF: Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters: This is a Muslim militant organization based in Mindanao. It splintered from the MILF after the Philippine Supreme Court nullified the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain. Ameril Umbra Kato founded the organization since he wants full independence and disagrees with the MILF’s acceptance of autonomy.

CCCH: Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities: This is a mechanism under the Comprehensive Agreement on Bangsamoro (CAB) and composed of representatives from both the GPH and MILF. It is tasked to oversee that both parties “shall desist from committing any prohibited hostile and provocative acts.”

AHJAG: Ad Hoc Joint Action Group: This group was formed to coordinate and work in tandem with the Joint CCCH. It is composed of representatives from both the GPH and the MILF. It is specifically tasked to implement the isolation and interdiction of all criminal syndicates, kidnap-for-ransom groups and other criminal groups including the “lost commands” or splinter armed groups operating in MILF areas and communities.

IMT: International Monitoring Team: This team is tasked to monitor the implementation of the Agreement on Peace between the GPH and the MILF.

KIA: Killed in action. Term used by the military to describe the death of their soldiers in the hands of hostile forces.

WIA: Wounded in action. Used to describe combatants wounded while fighting.

HVT: High Value Target: According to the US Department of Defense, defines an HVT as a target the enemy commander requires for the successful completion of the mission. The loss of high-value targets would be expected to seriously degrade important enemy functions throughout the friendly commander’s area of interest.

IED: Improvised Explosive Device: This is a bomb constructed and deployed in ways other than in conventional military action. It may be composed of conventional military explosives, such as an artillery round, attached to a detonating mechanism and can also be detonated through a cellphone. – Cong B. Corrales

Sources: www.gov.ph, www.opapp.gov.ph, www.saf.pnp.gov.ph

How the guns were silenced

IT IS EASY to start a battle but difficult to end one. How did the ceasefire mechanisms under the peace pact between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front helped in stopping the clash between rebel forces and members of the Special Action Force in Mamasapano, Maguindanao province?

Below is the infographics from the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process.

Chronology of Events-Mamasapano Incident

We are also publishing in full this report originally published on the website of the OPAPP.

GPH, MILF ceasefire mechanisms contribute to success of law enforcement ops

MANILA – Several successful law enforcement operations that led to the neutralization of terrorists and capture of criminal lairs in Central Mindanao were facilitated by the ceasefire mechanisms of the Government of the Philippines (GPH) and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

“This shows that our ceasefire mechanisms work,” Brig. Gen. Manolito Orense, the chair of the government side of the Ad Hoc Joint Action Group (AHJAG) said, noting that law enforcement operations can be “smoothly implemented thru a collaboration of all parties and by adhering to the ceasefire protocols.”

The AHJAG ?is one of several ceasefire mechanisms under the GPH-MILF peace process. It was established in May 2002, through a joint communiqué between the GPH and MILF? and formally organized in 2005. Its mandate is to coordinate, monitor and disseminate information between and among the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and Philippine National Police (PNP) for the Government, and the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF) for the MILF, to effect the apprehension and arrest of the identified selected criminal elements within the “MILF areas/communities.”

The AHJAG, along with the Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH), are vital to the implementation of the ceasefire accord signed by the parties in 1997. A joint CCCH ?was established as provided for by the Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities and was designed to activate and respond immediately to de-escalate any reported hostile armed confrontation between the Government and MILF forces, with no need for Presidential nor Cabinet Secretary level instruction.

Orense made the statement following the Senate hearing on the unfortunate incident in the town of Mamasapano in the province of Maguindanao, where a police operation against two high-value targets led to a deadly firefight with the MILF and other armed groups in the area. Cited as reason in the misencounter between government troops and the MILF is the lack of coordination, which is an important component in the Revised AFP/PNP Guidelines for the AHJAG signed by the leaderships of government security forces in 2013.

Successful operations

Orense cited at least three operations that were successfully carried-out following the protocols under the ceasefire agreement and operational guidelines for the AHJAG.

He said a military operation under the Army’s 103rd Infantry Brigade and its 1st Infantry Division made a significant blow against the Killafah Islamiyah Mindanao at Lumbaca Unayan, Lanao del Sur on November 2, 2013. The military overran the group’s training camp and seized subversive documents and other war materials. The group has been tagged as perpetrators of previous bombing incidents in some parts of Mindanao.

According to Orense, the success of said operation was assured when the joint CCCH and AHJAG were notified at least 24 hours prior to the actual combat operation.

Another case was on February 2, 2014, when a joint operation was conducted by operatives of the Philippine National Police, the military’s 6th Infantry Division, and the Joint Task Force Central Mindanao to run after key leaders of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) in the town of Shariff Saydona Mustapha, Maguindanao province.

He said a major camp of the BIFF, where the regional terrorist group Jemah Islamiyah had established a foothold, was seized and their armaments were confiscated.

In said case, the CCCH and the AHJAG of both the GPH and the MILF were notified at least 72 hours prior to the conduct of operation.

He said the coordination led the fighters of the MILF to “pull-out of the area to pave the way for the successful operation.”

Meanwhile, the most recent operation facilitated by the ceasefire mechanisms was in November last year, where the military launched an operation against bomb-making expert Abdul Basit Usman and his cohorts, who are members of the BIFF in Barangay Libutan, Mamasapano, Maguindanao.

The operation resulted to the death of Usman’s father-in-law.

“These operations were coordinated through the ceasefire/AHJAG mechanisms and resulted in the recovery of sizeable improvised explosive devices and other bomb-making components including high-powered firearms and other war materials,” Orense said.

Mary Ann Arnado of the Bantay Ceasefire attested that “all these years, the joint CCCH and IMT mechanisms were proven and effective.”

She said if only the Special Action Force used the ceasefire mechanism the tragic Mamasapano incident would not have been happened.

“Even in the recent Mamasapano [encounter], they (CCCH and AHJAG) were instrumental in disengaging the warring forces. The efficacy of the mechanism lies in the cooperation of the parties. Coordination spells survival because we are dealing with combatants on both sides who have only known language thru guns,” she said.

As per official records, there have been no reported skirmish between government and MILF forces since 2012 until the unfortunate encounter in Mamasapano? last month.

How the guns were silenced

IT IS EASY to start a battle but difficult to end one. How did the ceasefire mechanisms under the peace pact between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front helped in stopping the clash between rebel forces and members of the Special Action Force in Mamasapano, Maguindanao province?

Below is the infographics from the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process.

Chronology of Events-Mamasapano Incident

We are also publishing in full this report originally published on the website of the OPAPP.

GPH, MILF ceasefire mechanisms contribute to success of law enforcement ops

MANILA – Several successful law enforcement operations that led to the neutralization of terrorists and capture of criminal lairs in Central Mindanao were facilitated by the ceasefire mechanisms of the Government of the Philippines (GPH) and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

“This shows that our ceasefire mechanisms work,” Brig. Gen. Manolito Orense, the chair of the government side of the Ad Hoc Joint Action Group (AHJAG) said, noting that law enforcement operations can be “smoothly implemented thru a collaboration of all parties and by adhering to the ceasefire protocols.”

The AHJAG ?is one of several ceasefire mechanisms under the GPH-MILF peace process. It was established in May 2002, through a joint communiqué between the GPH and MILF? and formally organized in 2005. Its mandate is to coordinate, monitor and disseminate information between and among the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and Philippine National Police (PNP) for the Government, and the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF) for the MILF, to effect the apprehension and arrest of the identified selected criminal elements within the “MILF areas/communities.”

The AHJAG, along with the Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH), are vital to the implementation of the ceasefire accord signed by the parties in 1997. A joint CCCH ?was established as provided for by the Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities and was designed to activate and respond immediately to de-escalate any reported hostile armed confrontation between the Government and MILF forces, with no need for Presidential nor Cabinet Secretary level instruction.

Orense made the statement following the Senate hearing on the unfortunate incident in the town of Mamasapano in the province of Maguindanao, where a police operation against two high-value targets led to a deadly firefight with the MILF and other armed groups in the area. Cited as reason in the misencounter between government troops and the MILF is the lack of coordination, which is an important component in the Revised AFP/PNP Guidelines for the AHJAG signed by the leaderships of government security forces in 2013.

Successful operations

Orense cited at least three operations that were successfully carried-out following the protocols under the ceasefire agreement and operational guidelines for the AHJAG.

He said a military operation under the Army’s 103rd Infantry Brigade and its 1st Infantry Division made a significant blow against the Killafah Islamiyah Mindanao at Lumbaca Unayan, Lanao del Sur on November 2, 2013. The military overran the group’s training camp and seized subversive documents and other war materials. The group has been tagged as perpetrators of previous bombing incidents in some parts of Mindanao.

According to Orense, the success of said operation was assured when the joint CCCH and AHJAG were notified at least 24 hours prior to the actual combat operation.

Another case was on February 2, 2014, when a joint operation was conducted by operatives of the Philippine National Police, the military’s 6th Infantry Division, and the Joint Task Force Central Mindanao to run after key leaders of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) in the town of Shariff Saydona Mustapha, Maguindanao province.

He said a major camp of the BIFF, where the regional terrorist group Jemah Islamiyah had established a foothold, was seized and their armaments were confiscated.

In said case, the CCCH and the AHJAG of both the GPH and the MILF were notified at least 72 hours prior to the conduct of operation.

He said the coordination led the fighters of the MILF to “pull-out of the area to pave the way for the successful operation.”

Meanwhile, the most recent operation facilitated by the ceasefire mechanisms was in November last year, where the military launched an operation against bomb-making expert Abdul Basit Usman and his cohorts, who are members of the BIFF in Barangay Libutan, Mamasapano, Maguindanao.

The operation resulted to the death of Usman’s father-in-law.

“These operations were coordinated through the ceasefire/AHJAG mechanisms and resulted in the recovery of sizeable improvised explosive devices and other bomb-making components including high-powered firearms and other war materials,” Orense said.

Mary Ann Arnado of the Bantay Ceasefire attested that “all these years, the joint CCCH and IMT mechanisms were proven and effective.”

She said if only the Special Action Force used the ceasefire mechanism the tragic Mamasapano incident would not have been happened.

“Even in the recent Mamasapano [encounter], they (CCCH and AHJAG) were instrumental in disengaging the warring forces. The efficacy of the mechanism lies in the cooperation of the parties. Coordination spells survival because we are dealing with combatants on both sides who have only known language thru guns,” she said.

As per official records, there have been no reported skirmish between government and MILF forces since 2012 until the unfortunate encounter in Mamasapano? last month.