Oman Daily Observer

Duterte signs law for self-rule in Mindanao

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte (pictured) on Thursday said he has signed a law which grants expanded autonomy for the mainly Catholic nation’s Muslim south, a key step to ending one of Asia’s longest and deadliest conflicts.

The measure has for years been a crucial missing element to a languishin­g peace pact with the country’s largest rebel group which, along with other guerrillas, has waged a rebellion in the southern Philippine­s that has claimed about 150,000 lives since the 1970s.

“In every conflict, the victims are the innocents, the children, the women so try to think it over because I already signed the BBL (autonomy law),” Duterte said in a speech.

As the country’s first president from the southern region of Mindanao, Duterte pressed congress to pass the law — the farthest the peace process with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) has gone.

The law aims to enforce a historic but fragile 2014 peace deal where the MILF vowed to give up its quest for an independen­t homeland and lay down weapons of its 30,000 fighters in return for self-rule in the south.

Both sides believe creating the area will head off the lure of violent extremism as well as attract investment­s to a region where brutal poverty and perennial bloodshed has fuelled recruitmen­t by radical groups.

The initial peace accord was signed under Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino, but lawmakers then refused to pass the supporting legislatio­n.

Rebel factions and extremists began pledging allegiance to the IS group soon afterwards and last year attacked the southern city of Marawi sparking a five-month battle that killed 1,200 people.

Rebels have long been battling for independen­ce or autonomy in Mindanao, which they regard as their ancestral homeland dating back to when Arabic traders arrived there in the 13th century.

Under the law Duterte signed, a new political entity known as the Bangsamoro would replace the current autonomous region, gaining more power and resources.

The new region is to keep 75 per cent of taxes collected in the area as well as receive an annual fund allocation worth five per cent of national revenues, or about 60 billion pesos ($1.12 million). The region is also to have a parliament and Islamic sharia courts exclusivel­y for cases involving Muslims.

Under the peace agreement, the law also needs to be approved in a regional referendum, which is widely expected to pass after years of struggle for more autonomy.

Despite criticism that the new law was weaker than the 2014 peace deal, the MILF said it was largely satisfied with the measure.

The new region is to keep 75 per cent of taxes collected in the area as well as receive an annual fund allocation worth five per cent of national revenues, or about 60 billion pesos ($1.12 million). The region is also to have a parliament and Islamic sharia courts

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