Daily Tribune (Philippines)

P6B on tap as Marawi siege compensati­on

- BY EDJEN OLIQUINO @tribunephl_eao

Roughly P6 billion will be set aside by the government to compensate the displaced victims of the five-month siege that ravaged Marawi City in 2017, a Mindanaoan lawmaker announced Sunday.

The amount is on top of the initial P1 billion in programmed appropriat­ions for the Marawi Siege Victims Compensati­on Fund in 2023 and another P1 billion under this year’s national budget, according to Surigao del Sur Rep. Johnny Pimentel, a member of the House committee on public accounts.

“We all want the residents of Marawi to heal and succeed in rebuilding their lives, and we all want the city to fully recover and prosper,” Pimentel said.

The P6 billion, he said, will be sourced from the unprogramm­ed funds of the current fiscal year, which stood at P731.4 billion, according to the Department of Budget and Management.

The unprogramm­ed funds are typically tapped by the government in cases of emergencie­s when infrastruc­ture projects and social programs are required. This may be utilized in specific cases of surplus revenue collection­s, new revenue collection­s, and authorized loans for foreign assisted projects.

Marawi City was stormed by Islamic State inspired homegrown terrorist Maute, leaving homes, properties, and businesses wrecked after a five-month-long armed conflict with the government security forces, leaving thousands of the city’s civilian population displaced.

The government has been assisting siege victims in getting back on their feet by compensati­ng them, particular­ly the lawful owners of properties torn down or partially damaged by hostility.

The Marawi Siege Victims Compensati­on Law of 2022 (RA 11696) establishe­d the reparation fund and the Marawi Compensati­on Board, which is responsibl­e for receiving and processing compensati­on applicatio­ns and awarding monetary compensati­on to eligible families.

As of September last year, the MCB reported over P17 billion in claims filed by siege victims. The MCB has since started paying P350,000 each to the heirs of dead victims.

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