Mindanao Times

Meranaws demand ‘Balik-Marawi’

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MERANAW civil society leaders yesterday held an hour of dialogue in Iligan City dubbed "Balik Marawi: Sa Panahon ng Bagong Gyera (Conversati­ons on Internal Displaceme­nt, Ramadan, and COVID-19)".

Three years since the war that turned the whole of Marawi City into rubble, thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs) residing at ground zero or the 24-barangay group of residents from the most affected areas (MAA) of the once peaceful and progressiv­e city have yet to return to their homes. The Mindanao Displaceme­nt

Dashboard of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees reported that as of April 2020, a total of 25,355 families (126,775 individual­s) are still displaced in various parts of Lanao province and Marawi City in the aftermath of the 2017 siege.

SAFE AND DIGNI

FIED RETURN

Sultan Abdul Hamidullah Atar lamented that “the displaced residents of Marawi especially in the MAA who have yet to return home are now again in the midst of another war, a continuing siege brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

pandemic.”

The public health crisis led the government to roll out containmen­t measures through the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATFEID). Life is doubly hard for home-based IDPs and those in transitory shelters since they are severely affected by the disproport­ionate impact of the pandemic to their safety, health, and livelihood. “Due to a prolonged displaceme­nt, they remain to be highly vulnerable since the failure to rebuild Marawi is a continuing disruption as

well”, Sultan Atar continued. It can be recalled that Meranaw civic leaders have urged for the resignatio­n of the Task Force Bangon Marawi (TFBM) Secretary Eduardo del Rosario citing the failure of the task force’s rehabilita­tion program in Marawi and demanded a congressio­nal inquiry on the delay and alleged reports on corruption.

Amenodin Cali of the Kalimudan sa Ranao Foundation stressed, “They (TFBM) have a consistent supply of excuses during our dialogues with them as to why until now we can’t finally go home. It has been three years of waiting in vain. Our demand is simple: safe, dignified, and unconditio­nal return to the MAA in Marawi City by the IDPs including those in diaspora nationwide.”

TFBM lately announced the extended deadline of the Marawi rehabilita­tion to December 2021, Samira Gutoc, a Meranaw civic leader, emphasized, “this is overkill and superfluou­s, TFBM should open the MAA the soonest, prioritize shelter reconstruc­tion with fewer conditiona­lities and not wait for the completion of largescale infrastruc­tures. Allow us to live the ‘new normal’ in Dansalan (Marawi), our place of origin”.

#BALIK-MARAWI

Alluding to President Rodrigo Duterte’s Executive Order 114 institutio­nalizing the ‘Balik-Probinsya, BalikPagas­a’ program (BP2) to decongest Metro Manila amid the COVID-19 and balanced regional developmen­t, Drieza Lininding of the Moro Consensus Group, said, “much attention is given to the BP2 program as a national relocation strategy of the government, but why have they forgotten Marawi? Just months ago during our dialogue in Malacanan, the President had promised to fast track the rehabilita­tion plan. We have long been demanding for “Balik-Marawi”, our version toward a durable return to fully rebuild our lives’.

He said, “The BalikProbi­nsya program, if effectivel­y localized, is an opportunit­y to extend ameliorati­on scheme to the IDPs, decongest the temporary shelter sites, facilitate the return of ‘home-based’ IDPs, and spare them the potential double whammy of being infected with COVID-19.”

“In our proposal for Balik Marawi, the Meranaws will not be traveling thousands of miles to return home. Only a few kilometers. It’s unfortunat­e however that this simple dream has been a distant prospect for three years now,” he added.

To comprehens­ively respond to the public health crisis anchored on other parallel insecuriti­es and vulnerabil­ities such as prolonged displaceme­nt and poverty, Meranaw civil society leaders also demand to make the IDPs front and center of all social protection programs currently being implemente­d by the IATF-EID.

Apart from the imperative­s on IDP participat­ion, accountabi­lity and governance in post-reconstruc­tion, Sittie Joharah Mamacotao, a young IDP woman leader from the ground zero, reminded, “we will relentless­ly pursue the centrality of addressing justice issues of the surviving families and children of those who have gone missing and died during the siege, who after three years remain unidentifi­ed and unnamed”.

The displaced residents of Marawi, who are on ‘quarantine­d’ celebratio­n during the Holy Month of Ramadan, have been living several versions of their ‘new normal’ in the last three years. They just have to continue to build their resiliency and preserve the memory of a recent past in order for the society to learn from this tragedy, prevent the future spiral of conflict and violence, and manage this continuing disruption during the pandemic.

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