Sun.Star Cebu

Participat­ory governance under Duterte

- MUSSOLINI S. LIDASAN

IATTENDED recently the Social Developmen­t Initiative­s Summit at the SMX Convention Center in Davao City. The summit was organised by the Office of the Cabinet Secretary with a theme, "Malasakit at Pagbabago." It was attended by around 300 participan­ts from various civil society organisati­ons, peace advocates, academe, Cabinet secretarie­s of President Rodrigo Duterte and key officials of the different line agencies at the regional level.

The summit was in line with the President Duterte's framework for participat­ory governance. It also aims to achieve the following: Inclusive-to engage the government and basic sectors in crafting the social developmen­t agenda; Cohesive--to identify doable collaborat­ive initiative­s and actionable recommenda­tions; Accountabl­e -- to come up with measurable convergenc­e mechanisms.

Undersecre­tary Peter Lavina, member of the organising committee of the activity, told the press that the summit was a spin-off of the "Sulong Pilipinas" consultati­ve conference that was organised by the economic team of President Duterte last June 20 to 21. The conference drafted the 10-point socioecono­mic agenda of the present administra­tion.

Overall, the summit convened private and public sectors to discuss and plan ways of addressing all aspects of sustainabl­e developmen­t with the major focus on education and peace building, environmen­t and disaster preparedne­ss/risk mitigation, livelihood and housing, and health.

I attended several summits and conference­s in the past. I do hope that for this one, the plans that we prepared would be properly implemente­d. Active participat­ion of the people from the communitie­s is need- ed to ensure that the social developmen­t agenda of President Duterte will become a reality.

I am glad that Secretary Jun Evasco and Usec Lavina are both onboard in this government program. Their experience­s as activists and members of the CSOs can widen the lens of developmen­t paradigm needed in our country today.

*** In line with the celebratio­n of the 71st Independen­ce Day of the Republic of Indonesia, the Indonesian Consular Office in Davao City and the University of Mindanao, in collaborat­ion Universita­s Muhammadiy­ah Yogyakarta, and Universita­s Bhayangkar­a Jakarta Raya conducted last August 22, 2016, the Internatio­nal Conference on Indonesia and Philippine Arts, Culture and Languages. The conference was participat­ed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia, Ministry of Tourism, the Consulate General, and students from the three universiti­es mentioned.

I was invited in this conference as a guest speaker during the plenary session. The title of my speech was “Sharing Experience­s on Indo- nesia: Culture and Languages.” Our engagement and partnershi­p with the Indonesian government and the universiti­es in Jakarta, Bandung, and Yogyakarta started last 2012.

I started my speech by noting that culture refers to the characteri­stics and knowledge of a particular group of people, defined by everything from language, religion, cuisine, social habits, music and arts. Hence, the topic assigned to me was broad. But I summarized by talk in three points: Islam and Democracy: Model for the Bangsamoro people, Language and Culture-- Strong identity, and my exposure on Islamic micro finance, Baitul Mal was Tamwil.

I noted that Indonesia's Muslim leaders favor a democracy in which individual rights and group-differenti­ated rights converge within a system of legal pluralism, a vision at odds with American-style secular government but common in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. Our leaders from the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao must study and learn from the Indonesian experience of Islam and democracy.

"As we explore academic partnershi­ps with the Indonesian universiti­es, we hope that this can also strengthen the dialogue between Muslims, Christians, and Indigenous peoples in Mindanao,” I said.

I added: “Looking at the global complexiti­es of the challenges for justice in the economy and sustainabi­lity of life, we need to have an inter-religious and interfaith economic dialogue in Asia and the Pacific that can help promote the common good of all human race."

I hope there will be more universiti­es from Indonesia that will actively work with universiti­es in Mindanao for academic partnershi­ps.-- from Sun.Star Davao

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