Philippine Daily Inquirer

DELAY IN REHAB TESTS PATIENCE IN MARAWI REGIONS / A12

Start of work to rebuild areas wrecked by war on Islamic State postponed thrice already

- —REPORTS FROM DIVINA SUSONANDJI­GGER JERUSALEM INQ

MARAWI CITY— The delay in the start of rehabilita­tion work in areas razed to the ground by war between government forces and followers of Islamic State (IS) was starting to test the patience of residents and even an official involved in bringing the country’s only Muslim city back on its feet.

Some groups, though, said while they considered the delay a “big disappoint­ment,” they also saw it as a blessing in disguise.

The government has reset groundbrea­king rites that would mark the start of the rehabilita­tion program twice.

The developer, a Chineseled consortium, that was to rebuild the area and had won the bidding failed to meet key requiremen­ts. The vacuum has yet to be filled.

“It is a disappoint­ment,” said Drieza Lininding, head of the Moro Consensus Group.

More time?

“But at the same time, a blessing in disguise, since the Duterte administra­tion and Marawi residents still have the time and opportunit­y to sit down and discuss once again the many issues surroundin­g the city’s recovery plan,” Lininding said.

The developer who failed to meet requiremen­ts was a Chinese-led consortium but most Maranao were wary of Chinese and other outsiders.

Tirmizy Abdullah, an associate professor at Mindanao State University in Marawi, expressed fear about the participat­ion of Chinese companies in the rehabilita­tion.

“The people don’t want that the government use Chinese money in the rehabilita­tion since they know that it is not for free,” he said.

“Maranao people have a strong spirit of resiliency and we believe that we don’t need to borrow from China just to recover,” he added.

Let us do it

He reiterated a call being made by displaced Marawi residents—for the Task Force Bangon Marawi to restore basic ser- vices and facilities in villages that had become battlegrou­nds between the military and IS followers from Maute and Abu Sayyaf.

The people, Abdullah said, should just be allowed to return and rebuild their communitie­s.

Three postponeme­nts

Assemblyma­n Zia Adiong, of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, said it would have been better if the government had handed the contract to capable local companies.

“If only the government is getting local contractor­s, then this wouldn’t take too long,” Adiong said.

“There are many local con- tractors that are capable,” he said.

He said the people of Marawi had been expecting rehabilita­tion to start in June. But it was moved to July and again to August.

He said people, including him, were getting impatient.

“As resident of ground zero, I am getting impatient now,” he said.

“If I, who lives in a comfortabl­e place, am getting impatient, how much more for those who are living in evacuation tents and temporary shelters and those who are living with relatives?” Adiong said.

“The process is getting too long already,” he said. “Too long.”

 ?? —RICHEL V. UMEL ?? EVACUEES Womenwalk on a dirt road in a settlement for Marawi City residents displaced by the war on Islamic State.
—RICHEL V. UMEL EVACUEES Womenwalk on a dirt road in a settlement for Marawi City residents displaced by the war on Islamic State.

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