Business World

OLD AND NEW

- Marifi S. Jara, Arjay S. Balinbin, Rosemarie A. Zamora, Andrea Louise E. San Juan, Albert F. Arcilla

BTC Chairperso­n Ghazali Jaafar, a top MILF official who headed the group’s peace negotiatin­g panel from 1996-1997, explained that the BBL is about resolving the very old “Bangsamoro Question” and addressing a new threat, the emergence of violent extremism.

“Summing up all the number of years since 1521, it means that the Bangsamoro Question has been present for almost 500 years. Parallel to this is the rise and fall cycle of peace negotiatio­ns… Consequent­ly, the trust of some Bangsamoro groups on the peace process faded away. These groups started to become radicalize­d and developed the mindset that the only solution to the Bangsamoro issue is through the use of force,” Mr. Jaafar said in a speech at the Dec. 4, 2017 forum “Way Forward: Beyond Peace in Mindanao” organized by the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) and the Ateneo de Manila University.

“They started gathering strength even to the point of disregardi­ng the sources and the means just to develop their firefight capability. Because of frustratio­n, they do not even mind if the source of the support they receive are from what others refer to as extremists or ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria),” said Mr. Jaafar, noting that these local armed groups “in a strict sense, are not ISIS themselves.”

“They are local armed groups that have been organized with the objective of resolving the Bangsamoro Question,” he added.

Conflict Alert, the monitoring system developed by Internatio­nal Alert Philippine­s, has noted “the growing strength of the local extremists” since 2015.

In its 2017 Report titled Guns, Drugs, and Extremism: Bangsamoro’s New Wars, launched Nov. 29, Conflict Alert said “Rebellionr­elated violence increased by 19% from 144 incidents in 2015 to 171 incidents in 2016.”

More than half of these incidents were in Maguindana­o, accounting for 96 in 2016, up from 71 the previous year.

The province is a known lair of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, also referred to as the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement, a group that broke away from the MILF at the height of the peace negotiatio­ns with the government, and has since pledged allegiance to ISIS.

Conflict Alert, in it’s 2016 Report, also noted “the growing strength of the Maute Group, which is at the core of Dawlah Islamiya.”

It said that “judging by the number of conflict deaths ( 86) from only six incidents involving the Maute Group that were monitored at that time, it demonstrat­ed it had the resources and capacity to launch large-scale and deadly attacks.”

Their rampage in Marawi last year showed just that — a fivemonth long battle against government forces that left in its wake deaths, diaspora, and harrowing destructio­n in what is recognized as an “Islamic City”, the only one in the country.

Mr. Ebrahim calls these groups the “new enemies”, whom he described as followers of a “perverted ideology devoid of a national agenda… without regard to the rules of war and the welfare of the people.”

Mr. Duterte, unlike his stance on the communist movement, wants a comprehens­ive, inclusive and firm end to the Bangsamoro struggle through the BBL.

“So let us work on the historical issues. Land, the social injustices that were committed since then,” he said at the Nov. 27 assembly, even as he hinted on what he anticipate­s to be a battle in Congress.

“Alam ko realist kayo (I know you are realists),” he told the crowd.

“If it’s (BBL provisions) not in consonance… then we work it out, but at least Congress and the Filipino people should be given a day to hear you out on what we intend to do… I will impress upon them that you have to devote even one day or two days. Hear them out, hear us from Mindanao,” he said.

Professor Ali T. Yacub, Al-Hj, president of the Golden Crescent Consortium of Peace Builders and Affiliates, said the BBL is the “hard work of the Moro people” that should not be delayed in considerat­ion of the proposal to shift to federalism.

Another Muslim leader, Sheikh Zayd Ocfemia, president of the Assunah Foundation and a member of the Ulama Council for Zamboanga Peninsula, expressed the same sentiment, saying: “Federalism takes a longer time before it will pass, while the BBL it’s already there.”

The bottomline, Mr. Duterte said, is to find a meeting point for two factors relating to the Bangsamoro Question: “Correct the injustice committed against the Moro people and all of the lumads (IPs) here. Second is to preserve the Republic… there has to be a condition that is for all.” —

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