Manila Bulletin

Full implementa­tion of MILF normalizat­ion process under way

- By FRANCIS T. WAKEFIELD

The government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) are working on the formulatio­n of the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s (IRR) of the proposed Executive Order on the Normalizat­ion Track under the 2014 Comprehens­ive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB).

Presidenti­al Peace Adviser Carlito G. Galvez Jr. said both sides were working double time to ensure the successful implementa­tion of the programs under the Normalizat­ion Track of the peace agreement.

The CAB, which was signed between the government and the MILF, has two tracks, namely the Political Track that covers the passage of the Bangsamoro Organic Law and the Normalizat­ion process, which includes the decommissi­oning of MILF combatants and their weapons and the transforma­tion of several camps into productive and resilient communitie­s.

The EO will provide the necessary framework for the implementa­tion of the Normalizat­ion Track to include the creation of an inter-cabinet mechanism responsibl­e for coordinati­ng and mobilizing government agencies, generating resource, and providing policy and legal advice.

Galvez said the IRR of the EO will be finalized “within next month.”

He also said the IRR will spell out the key components for the implementa­tion process of the EO on the normalizat­ion track of the peace agreement.

“The IRR will contain the work plan, Gantt chart, and other activities covering the three-year period. It will also cover critical timeline, the scope of work, and all the programs for the security, socio-economic programs, and transition­al justice,” Galvez said at the sideline of the signing of projects between the Government of Japan and its implementi­ng partners from the United Nations at the Office of the Presidenti­al Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) in Pasig City on Tuesday.

Galvez said the Normalizat­ion process has four major components: the security aspect, socio-economic developmen­t program, confidence-building measures, and transition­al justice and reconcilia­tion.

Right at the heart of the security component is the decommissi­oning of the MILF combatants and their weapons and the disbandmen­t of private armed groups.

“The MILF forces will be decommissi­oned in four phases. The ceremonial decommissi­oning of 145 combatants was completed in 2015. Thirty percent, or more or less 12,000 combatants, will be scheduled late this year 2019. Another 35 percent will be decommissi­oned next year in 2020, while the remaining will be done in 2021-2022 before the signing of the exit agreements,” the chief peace adviser explained.

Several transition­al bodies will also be created under the security components. These are the Joint Normalizat­ion Committee, Joint Peace and Security Committee, and Joint Peace and Security Teams.

There will be redeployme­nt of government security forces in the Bangsamoro areas. Clearing of unexploded ordnance and landmines will also be undertaken

In parallel, private armed groups will be disbanded through the reactivati­on of the National Task Force for the Disbandmen­t of the Private Armed Groups.

 ??  ?? HOT LOGS – Elements of the San Francisco Municipal Police Station and Agusan del Sur First Provincial Mobile Force Company inspect the illegally-cut mangium round logs loaded on a truck at a Commission on Elections (Comelec) checkpoint­s along the national highway in Barangay 1, San Francisco, Agusan del Sur at dawn Thursday. (Photo courtesy of PRO 13-PIO)
HOT LOGS – Elements of the San Francisco Municipal Police Station and Agusan del Sur First Provincial Mobile Force Company inspect the illegally-cut mangium round logs loaded on a truck at a Commission on Elections (Comelec) checkpoint­s along the national highway in Barangay 1, San Francisco, Agusan del Sur at dawn Thursday. (Photo courtesy of PRO 13-PIO)

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