2nd FAB forum draws
rare mass backing
The 2nd FAB forum, jointly
hosted here on Jan. 9-10 by Maguindanao Gov. Esmael Mangudadatu and the
province’s municipal mayors’ league, was graced Prof. Miriam Coronel-Ferrer,
chair of the government peace panel and Jun Mantawil, head of the MILF panel
secretariat.
Ferrer, who addressed
thousands of forum participants, cited the host officials for embarking on the
activity, which she said would boost to the on-going GPH-MILF peace talks.
“Let’s continue
helping one other in supporting the peace process. The quest for lasting peace
is everybody’s concern…Political colors should be set aside,” Ferrer told
participants in Pilipino amid the attendance of politicians seeking election
under different parties this year.
Public figures,
including even those outside the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao and
opposed to the botched 2008 deal on ancestral domain, have crossed political
party lines and showed full backing of the Framework Agreement on Bangsamoro
(FAB) through the just-concluded regional consultation hosted here by the
provincial government.
Leaders and delegates
from ARMM areas were ostensibly delighted by the attendance of North Cotabato
Governor Emmylou Taliño-Mendoza and her political rival former Vice Governor
Manny Piñol, who initiated petitions that led to Supreme Court’s junking four
years ago of the state’s memorandum on ancestral domain (MOA-AD) with the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
Piñol, who is facing
Taliño-Mendoza in this year’s gubernatorial race for the second time, said he
threw his support to the Aquino government’s FAB with the MILF because it has
undergone mass consultations, contrary to the forging of the 2008 MOA-AD that
was allegedly kept under wrap.
The event also drew
the attendance of South Cotabato Rep. Daisy Avance Fuentes and Lualhati
Antonino, chair of the Mindanao Development Authority, who were all critical of
Malacañang’s peace overtures with Moro factions during the time of Presidents
Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
The FAB, forged on
October 15, 2012 in Malacañang by the government and MILF leaderships, seeks to
establish a new autonomous political entity called Bangsamoro to replace ARMM
and absorb six towns in Lanao del Norte and 39 villages in five North Cotabato
towns that voted for autonomy in a 2002 plebiscite.
In a press briefing,
Ferrer said the Transition Commission (TransCom) that would draft the basic law
for the Bangsamoro region will be filled up “this month” 15 members, eight from
the MILF and seven from the government side.
Ferrer was also
optimistic that the FAB four annexes being tackled in continuing GHP-MILF talks
would be completed by March this year.
The annexes include
the operational modalities of the Transition Authority that would rule the
Bangsamoro after the conduct of a plebiscite that would deem ARMM abolished and
warrant the election of its regular officials in 2016.
The three other
annexes concern the wealth-sharing, power-sharing and normalization process
that would include the decommissioning of MILF combat forces.
Forum delegates were
also amazed of the “show of unity in attendance” of ARMM incumbent leaders
including caretaker-Regional Governor Mujiv Hataman and Provincial Governors
Sakur Tan of Sulu, Mamintal Alonto-Adiong Jr. of Lanao del Sur, Jum Akbar of
Bailan, Sadikul Sahali of Tawi-Tawi , and horum host Mangudadatu of this
province.
It was also graced by
top military brasses in the south led by Lt. Gen. Jorge Segovia, chief of the
Eastern Mindanao Command, and Maj. Gen. Caesar Ronnie Ordoyo, commander of the
Army’s 6th Infantry Division,
alongside high ranking police officials.
In a separate press
conference here, Governors Mangudadatu, Tan, Sahali, Adiong and Akbar took
turns in committing their “unwavering support” to the FAB as exemplified in the
conduct of the 1st forum in Sulu, the just-concluded second episode here, and the
next similar events in Basilan, Lanao del Sur and Tawi-Tawi.
The five Muslim
governors credited the current government and MILF leaderships for exerting
unprecedented efforts in forging the FAB, which they described as “full of
potentials” to finally end the decades-old Moro rebellion.
Also present in the
forum here were members of the ARMM’s 27-seat Regional Assembly led by Speaker
Rasol Mitmug Jr. that had earlier crafted a litany of suggestions to guide the
MILF and government peace panels in striking a “final Compact Peace Agreement.”
Meanwhile, in his
speech at the forum, Hataman renewed his vow to step down and give way to the
full implementation of whatever the government and the MILF may agree upon
soon. He is running for ARMM governor in the coming synchronized elections.
Highlighting the forum
was an earlier peace caravan involving more than 1,000 of vehicles that toured
this province and several towns in North Cotabato.
Presided by Gov.
Mangudadatu, the forum’s technical working group adopted seven resolutions
recommending to the government and MILF panels proposals to hasten the peace
process.
One of the resolutions
called on the two panels to recognize the need to involve non-Muslims and the
lumad sectors, or the so-called non-Moro indigenous people, in the setting up
of the proposed Bangsamoro region.
Another resolution
asked the GPH and MILF panels and the ARMM five provincial governors to convene
and discuss the viability of involving local government units in the TransCom
and the Bangsamoro Transition Authority.
Also approved by
Mangudadatu was a resolution tasking the five ARMM provincial governors and
their mayors to launch information drives, with the help of the media, to
enhance public awareness about the FAB, and urging the TransCom to conduct
extensive dialogues about the Mindanao peace process.
The current GPH-MILF peace talks MILF started January 7, 1997, but collapsed in 2000, in 2003 and in 2008 due to peace and security issues that hounded many flashpoint areas in Mindanao supposedly covered by the 1997 Agreement on General Cessation of Hostilities.
The
thorny and contentious peace talks gained headway in recent years with the
participation of foreign donors and international peace advocacy organizations,
including the peacekeeping contingent International Monitoring Team from
Malaysia, Libya, Brunei and Indonesia, and non-uniformed conflict resolution experts
from Norway, Japan and the European Union. (Text by Ali G. Macabalang)