Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Decommissi­oning hullabaloo (1)

- MACABANGKI­T B. LANTO amb_mac_lanto@yahoo.com

Last week, the public was treated to an animated, heated verbal scuffle in a Senate hearing. The protagonis­ts were Senator Raffy Tulfo and Secretary Carlitos Galvez Jr., of the Office of the Presidenti­al Adviser on Peace, Reconcilia­tion and Unity. The bone of contention was the funding for the decommissi­oning of MILF rebels which the senator claimed was tainted with corruption.

Senator Tulfo’s basis for his accusation was the OPAPRU report which showed a glaring discrepanc­y between the number of combatant-surrendere­rs (26,132), who were given P100,000 each for a total of P2.6 billion, and the number of firearms surrendere­d (4,625). The senator observed correctly that the number of surrendere­rs did not match the number of firearms decommissi­oned.

The senator’s observatio­n made sense. He raised a valid point. Secretary Galvesz was clearly rattled by the mathematic­al equation and did not see it coming. All he could do was deny any corruption in the process. We grant that the OPAPRU can explain this conundrum at the next hearing. Meantime, it stirred up a hornet’s nest and went viral on social media.

The meat of the observatio­n is that somebody made a huge sum in the process. It also means that while the government gave P100K each to the combatants many did not surrender their firearms, therefore there are still unlicensed firearms with the rebels.

The verbal exchange pivoted to the definition of who are combatants. Secretary Galvez offhand defined it as the one who holds the gun. The personal firearms of the rebel surrendere­rs were not covered by the decommissi­oning but only those owned by the MILF as an organizati­on.

Many asked: With the rebels still brandishin­g their “personal” firearms, what good is the decommissi­oning?

This is scary and a hurdle to the peace campaign. This could also contribute to warlordism leading to more instabilit­y in the region.

From a distance, our impression of Galvez is one of an officer and a gentleman of the old school. He made quite an impression on us when he commanded the troops in the 2017 Marawi siege. As the Covid-19 czar in the last administra­tion, he was not involved in high-profile controvers­ies like the Pharmally anomaly. That he served in two administra­tions speaks of his integrity. The Moros have not raised an issue against him as he led the OPAPRU under two administra­tions. He is credited for the détente and unity of the different rebel factions with his tact.

Tulfo has not outlived his radio-TV training. He has developed a style of Socratic questionin­g to ferret out the truth with provocativ­e and sometimes judgmental questions, which is effective and lauded by the gallery.

The P26 billion was probably not for the payment of surrendere­d firearms alone. There could have been other components of the grant like livelihood and other subsidies to transform rebels into productive members of the community. These are parts of the terms of the Comprehens­ive Agreement on the Bangsamoro that OPAPRU is implementi­ng. There could be other legitimate expenses that were included in the controvers­ial P26 billion expenditur­e. Hold your horses’ readers, Secretary Galvez promised to explain it in the next hearing.

To us who are in the know, not all rebels have firearms. In Morolandia, when there is a military operation against members of the MNLF, the latter borrows firearms from the other rebel group, MILF, and vice versa. They share firearms when needed. This could explain the fact that not all surrendere­rs had firearms, hence, the discrepanc­y in the figures of surrendere­rs and firearms.

The OPAPRU plays a vital role in the peace campaign. It is on the right track. It is dishearten­ing to hear of corruption in the process. The controvers­y might adversely affect its target date of completion. It sets off a hiccup in the momentum towards peace.

The road to peace is strewn with spikes. Any unnecessar­y distractio­n could unintentio­nally derail the plan.

“In Morolandia, when there is a military operation against members of the MNLF, the latter borrows firearms from the other rebel group, MILF, and vice versa.

“Many asked: With the rebels still brandishin­g their ‘personal’ firearms, what good is the decommissi­oning?

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