Philippine Daily Inquirer

Heart-stopping moments inside MILF peace talks

- By Nikko Dizon

BEFORE the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) sealed a deal for wealth-sharing in the future Bangsamoro region in Mindanao, there were too many heart-stopping moments and too much hand wringing in Kuala Lumpur.

There was also a “mild threat” from the MILF, made at the late

hours of the sixth day of negotiatio­ns, the longest round of talks the government and the secessioni­st group had under the administra­tion of President Aquino.

Up to the last minute, nobody knew if they would bring home the second of the four annexes to the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro that would make up the comprehens­ive peace agreement, signed and agreed upon by both parties.

“At the last minute, we took a break again. We sealed the deal at 10:30 p.m. But at 10 p.m. (the MILF) were still having a caucus. At that time we were already thinking, ‘Would there be an annex or none?’” government chief negotiator Miriam Coronel-Ferrer said.

Ferrer said what the President wanted to know was, “What is the deal breaker?”

Ferrer and Presidenti­al Adviser on the Peace Process Teresita Deles did not go into the specifics of the deal breaker, which, by their recollecti­on, turned out to be more than one.

“But the last had to do with certain formulatio­ns they wanted to clarify,” Ferrer said.

Mild threat

A source with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns told the Inquirer that the MILF’s “mild threat” was the deal breaker of all the deal breakers on July 13, the last day of the talks.

The source said MILF chief negotiator Mohagher Iqbal told the government panel that MILF Chair Murad Ebrahim had called him up. “Chairman Murad had said that there would be no more extensions (to the talks) and that if there was no agreement that day, the MILF panel would go home,” the source said, requesting anonymity as he was not allowed to discuss the negotiatio­ns with journalist­s.

“It was the mild threat that broke the deal,” the source added.

The source said it was the reason why the government gave in to the “Regalian doctrine” in the Constituti­on and the MILF gave in to the 50-50 sharing but with incrementa­l increase in the fossil fuels (oil, natural gas, coal) and uranium.

The Regalian doctrine is embodied in Section 2 of Article XII of the Constituti­on, which states that all lands and natural resources in the public domain belong to the state.

Lawyer Armi Bayot, a member of the legal team from the Office of the Solicitor General, who had stayed with Ferrer and Deles said the government panel agreed to remove references to the Regalian doctrine in the wealthshar­ing annex to show respect and acknowledg­e the history of the Bangsamoro people.

At a dinner with reporters on Thursday, Ferrer showed how she wrung her hands and pursed her lips while she, Deles, panel member Yasmin Busran-Lao, and Bayot waited for the MILF negotiator­s to return from their caucus.

They also gave credit to the MILF team for its dedication to the talks, noting that it was the fasting month of Ramadan, the holiest for Muslims.

Iqbal and his team did not eat or drink the whole day, breaking their fast only at sundown.

Ferrer fasted along with her counterpar­ts, not drinking water while they were negotiatin­g. “I drank during our breaks,” she said.

When the MILF panel sat and faced the government anew, Deles said they had a proposal, which wasn’t too difficult to accept.

The government panel thought they were getting closer to signing the annex, when the MILF negotiator­s said there was one more thing.

“I just thought, ‘Oh, no! What could that be?’” Deles recalled, laughing.

“But that wasn’t too hard to give as well,” Ferrer added.

“There were a lot of heart-stopping moments,” Deles admitted.

Ferrer said that throughout the negotiatio­ns, the President and the Cabinet secretarie­s whose tasks concerned the issues in the wealthshar­ing annex “were in touch with very specific issues, very specific language for approval.”

“There were some key concession­s that we cannot give without (the President’s) consent,” Ferrer said.

At dinner, the President’s negotiator­s appeared relaxed and relieved. It had been tough for everyone, to say the least.

Lull in talks

There had been a lull in the talks since April, and the MILF was getting anxious about the delay in the resumption of the negotiatio­ns apparently because the government was reviewing the wealth-sharing document initialed by the two parties in February.

The MILF was not happy at all that the government appeared to be reneging on an initialed wealth-sharing document. Iqbal declared in June that the talks were deadlocked because the MILF would not accept any changes to the document.

Days after the declaratio­n, Iqbal and Ferrer were at the same human rights conference in Oslo where through the Malaysian facilitato­r, Datu Tengku, the government handed its proposed changes to the annex.

Ferrer said at the dinner that there was quite a difference between the Oslo document and the annex signed in Kuala Lumpur.

“Everything moved, but some (of the proposals) survived. Some was about finding the right language,” she said.

Ferrer said the most contentiou­s in the wealth-sharing annex “ever since” had been taxation, natural resources, and the annual block grant, which allows the Bangsamoro to get automatic appropriat­ion in the national budget.

In the end, both parties compromise­d all in the name of peace.

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