Business World

Rebuilding Marawi one shelter at a time

- Jomarc Angelo M. Corpuz

Over six years after its liberation from the militant group, Marawi City is close to being its former self with significan­t help from DHSUD.

An Islamic city filled with towering mosques and concrete houses, a center for culture and the arts at the heart of Mindanao, and a source of great pride not only to Maranaws who lived there but also to all the Muslims in the Philippine­s. Marawi City was once the jewel of the Filipino Muslim community. But after an attack led by the Islamic Statelinke­d Maute group in 2017 that took the lives of over 1000 militants and civilians, left another 360,000 homeless, and devastated what was once a bustling area, the city needed to rebuild from ashes and bulletshel­ls to return to its former glory.

Now, over six years after its liberation from the militant group, Marawi City is close to being its former self with significan­t help from the Department of Human Settlement­s and Urban Developmen­t (DHSUD).

The DHSUD is the primary government agency responsibl­e for housing, human settlement, and urban developmen­t. Under the department is the interagenc­y Task Force Bangon Marawi (TBFM) establishe­d through Former President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s Administra­tive Order No. 03 for the recovery reconstruc­tion, and rehabilita­tion of the City of Marawi and other affected localities.

With their achievemen­ts in the rehabilita­tion of Marawi City, President Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. commended the DHSUD and TBFM’s work in rebuilding once besieged city.

“Five years after the siege, Marawi City will rise again. The city’s vitality has come back. Various projects have been completed, and many infrastruc­tures have been built,” Mr. Marcos said in Filipino during his second State of the Nation Address (SONA) on June last year.

Among the projects that were completed by the DHSUD and TBFM and turned over to the Marawi local government unit and the Marawi Sultanate league during Mr. Marcos’ presidency include: the Sarimanok Sports Stadium, the Marawi Convention Center, 19 barangay halls with madrasah and health clinics in the most affected areas, the Marawi City Museum, School of Living Traditions and Restored Historical Landmark, Central Material Recovery Facility, and Trading Post/Food Terminal.

Another project, the ”Torogan”, locally known as a royal house, was built by the TBFM in Brgy. Sagongsong­an, Marawi City. The new building will serve as a meeting area and offices for Marawi’s traditiona­l leaders.

Close to 2,800 permanent shelters were also planned by the DHSUD to be constructe­d for internally displaced persons (IDP). As of November 2022, nearly 1,900 permanent shelters and almost 5,000 transitory shelters have been built across Marawi, according to the department’s website.

These houses for IDPs were jointly constructe­d by the TFBM, the National Housing Authority (NHA), the United Nations Human Settlement­s Program (UN-Habitat), the Social Housing Finance Corporatio­n, and the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).

Recently, TBFM Chairperso­n Jose Rizalino L. Acuzar launched the Kawiyagan Trade Fair and inaugurate­d three completed units of four-story, 20-classroom school buildings in Brgy. Moncado

Kadingilan in Marawi City. Meanwhile, the NHA, under the DHSUD, also awarded 254 permanent shelter units in Brgy. Kilala to the beneficiar­ies.

In March 2023, the DHSUD broke ground for a project intended to build 18 structures worth P200 million that includes a multi-purpose covered court, daycare center, wet and dry market, transport terminal, health center, material recovery facility, livelihood building, and police outposts.

Currently, the DHSUD is monitoring the implementa­tion of 26 ongoing programs including the Marawi City General Hospital by the Department of Health, the constructi­on of several more school buildings by the Department of Education, and the constructi­on of the New

Marawi City Jail by the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology.

Utmost priority is also given to sustainabl­e water and power supplies through other programs: the Bulk Water Supply project and the energizati­on of the most affected areas in the city spearheade­d by the Lanao del Sur Electric Cooperativ­e Inc.

To reduce delays on these projects and expedite recovery efforts, President Marcos signed Administra­tive Order No. 14 which streamline­d government agencies involved in the Marawi rebuild.

However, under the order, the TBFM ceased its operations on Dec. 31, 2023, and will be functus officio by March 31. The DHSUD will still oversee the constructi­on of shelters for displaced persons.

Finally, Mr. Marcos also said on his second SONA that financial reparation­s will be paid to qualified Marawi IDPs through the “Marawi Siege Victims Compensati­on Act “otherwise known as Republic Act 11696.

“We are currently processing financial aid for the victims of the Marawi siege so that they can start over. May hope prevail. May hope, vigilance, and aspiration­s for peace and progress continue,” Mr. Marcos said.

Indeed, Marawi City is returning to its former glory through the initiative­s of the DHSUD and what was TFBM. Over six years after the siege, the country’s lone Islamic City is soon to be the jewel of the Filipino Muslim community once again —

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 ?? ?? Task Force Bangon Marawi led a groundbrea­king ceremony for new community facilities in Marawi City last March 2023.
Task Force Bangon Marawi led a groundbrea­king ceremony for new community facilities in Marawi City last March 2023.

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