Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gov’t hit for lack of consultati­ons

- By Christine O. Avendaño

PRESIDENT Aquino’s peace negotiator­s came under fire yesterday during the penultimat­e Senate hearing on the proposed Bangsamoro charter for their alleged failure to consult sultanates and indigenous peoples in peace negotiatio­ns with the Moro Islamic Libera- tion Front (MILF).

Undersecre­tary Jose Lorena of the Office of the Presidenti­al Adviser on the Peace Process (Opapp) took the hot seat, as Secretary Teresita Quintos-Deles and chief negotiator Miriam Coronel-Ferrer had previous engagement­s.

Deles and Ferrer had a bad time in earlier Senate hearings on the massacre of 44 Special Action Force commandos on Jan. 25 in an MILF-controlled area in Maguindana­o province that sparked widespread indignatio­n and delayed Malacañang’s timetable for the

approval of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL).

Under questionin­g by Senators Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Francis Escudero, Lorena said the government peace panel dealt directly with the MILF, which he said represente­d the Bangsamoro people. He also said the government panel had conducted “Bangsamoro congresses” with “Bangsamoro people.”

Lorena said the “reality on the ground” was that even previous administra­tions had dealt with the MILF since then President Fidel V. Ramos signed a peace agreement with the MILF in 1996.

Abraham Idjirani, secretary general of the Sultanate of Sulu, said that in 2010, the sultanate wrote a letter to Malacañang requesting that it be included in the negotiatio­ns with the MILF. Idjirani said the sultanate was told in 2013 that its letter had been lost in the Palace files.

During the four-hour hearing, other representa­tives of sultanates and indigenous peoples decried that they likewise had been excluded in the peace negotiatio­ns. Their lament highlighte­d the penultimat­e hearing on the BBL.

The final hearing on June 3 will hear representa­tives of local government­s who likewise claimed they were not consulted.

Claim to Sabah

Majority Leader Alan Peter Cayetano raised a concern on the Philippine­s’ claim on Sabah. Cayetano pointed out that Malaysia, which is contesting the Sabah claim, is an MILF sponsor.

“Is there any guarantee that the sultanate’s claim on Sabah will be pursued if the MILF be- comes the leaders of the Bangsamoro Transition Commission?” Cayetano asked.

Lorena said the Philippine­s’ claim on Sabah had not been abandoned. He also said a government committee was studying the Sabah claim.

“I understand the failure of the Opapp in not including the sultanates of Muslim Mindanao because again it would seem that the nature of the negotiatio­ns between the Opapp and the MILF was very, very exclusive and not inclusive,” Marcos later told reporters.

Last week, the House BBL committee passed a version of the autonomy bill selected by President Aquino after two meetings with his House allies in Malacañang. The Palace denied news reports that the congressme­n were promised P50 million in pork barrel projects and P1 million in cash if they voted to approve the BBL.

Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, who earlier said there was a consensus in his committee that six provisions in the BBL were unconstitu­tional, steered the swift passage of the BBL with only minor changes. He denied criticisms that he “railroaded” the Palace version of the BBL.

Draft report

Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, chair of the Senate committee on constituti­onal amendments, is circulatin­g a draft report raising constituti­onal infirmitie­s in the BBL, which Malacañang wanted approved by June so that it could be mentioned in President Aquino’s final State of the Nation Address on July 27.

Nine senators have signed the Santiago report.

Malacañang has said that those who object to the BBL may go to the Supreme Court.

In 2008, radical factions of the MILF rampaged after the high tribunal rejected a peace agreement with the MILF signed by the Arroyo administra­tion, leaving hundreds dead and 500,000 displaced.

Several hundred supporters and opponents of the BBL held demonstrat­ions outside the Senate during the hearing yesterday.

A Marcos critic, Abdul Malik Cleofe, blasted the Senate panel’s “sluggishne­ss” in approving the BBL, indicating a “lack of commitment to the realizatio­n of peace.”

Cleofe’s group urged Marcos to do a “Rufus Rodriguez” and fast-track the passage of the BBL, which would establish a new autonomous region for Muslims in Mindanao.

 ?? RAFFY LERMA ?? YES TO BBL Muslim and Christian children show their support for the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) outside the Senate.
RAFFY LERMA YES TO BBL Muslim and Christian children show their support for the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) outside the Senate.

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