Philippine Daily Inquirer

BOL VOTE: WAR-WEARY MOROS DECIDE FUTURE

- By the Inquirer Staff @Team_Inquirer —REPORTS FROM BONG SARMIENTO, JEOFFREY MAITEM, EDWIN FERNANDEZ, SHEILA MAE DELA CRUZ, JULIE ALIPALA, TINA G. SANTOS, JAYMEE T. GAMIL, AP AND AFP

A decadeslon­g push to halt the violence that has claimed more than 120,000 lives in Mindanao culminated on Monday with a vote on giving the nation’s Muslim minority greater control over the region.

The plebiscite for the ratificati­on of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL), the charter of the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), was the final step in a peace agreement between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the key force in a separatist insurgency that had been going on since the 1970s.

Tight security

Amid tight security, voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ( ARMM)—composed of Basilan, Lanao del Sur, Maguindana­o, Sulu and TawiTawi provinces—and the cities of Cotabato and Isabela went to the polls as early as 7 a.m. to decide whether to ratify the BOL and establish the BARMM.

A second vote is scheduled for Feb. 6 in Lanao del Norte province (except Iligan City) and six towns in Cotabato that may want to become part of the BARMM.

But if the BOL is defeated in Monday’s plebiscite, there is no reason to hold the Feb. 6 vote, James Jimenez, spokespers­on for the Commission on Elections (Comelec), said on Sunday.

More than 20,000 police and soldiers were deployed to secure the vote.

The authoritie­s confiscate­d 85 firearms and 12 grenades at checkpoint­s days before the plebiscite.

A grenade explosion in Maguindana­o on Sunday night and the discovery of a grenade near a polling center in Cotabato City early on Monday caused tensions, but no untoward incidents marred the vote, and the Philippine National Police pronounced the plebiscite peaceful after the polls closed at 3 p.m.

2.2 million voters

The Comelec expected about 2.2 million voters to have participat­ed in the plebiscite.

The balloting was not computeriz­ed, with voters writing their answers to the questions of ratificati­on of the BOL and inclusion in the BARMM by hand.

The count of the vote, which began right after the polls closed, was being done also by hand.

Jimenez said on Sunday that the results would be known in four days, with the announceme­nt to be done in Manila.

The vote capped a tumultuous peace effort by the government and the MILF to seal a deal that was signed in 2014 but languished in Congress until it was finally approved last year.

Bloodshed, including a clash between elite police commandos and MILF fighters in Mamasapano, Maguindana­o, in 2015 and a five-month siege of Marawi City in Lanao del Sur by militants linked to the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group in Iraq and Syria in 2017, threatened to derail the peace deal.

Broad autonomy

Under the deal, the MILF gave up its goal of an independen­t state in Mindanao in exchange for broad autonomy.

The MILF’s 30,000 to 40,000 fighters would be demobilize­d and a parliament­ary government would be elected to run the new autonomous Muslim region.

The BARMM would replace the ARMMand receive an annual grant of P5 billion over the next 10 years for developmen­t.

Murad Ebrahim, the MILF chair, has repeatedly said that the establishm­ent of a viable Muslim autonomous region is the best antidote to about half a dozen smaller IS-inspired radical groups that remain a threat in Mindanao.

On Monday, as he voted in Simuay near the MILF’s main camp at Sultan Kudarat town in Maguindana­o, Murad said he had never thought that the establishm­ent of a broadly autonomous region for Muslims in Mindanao would happen, but with the conclusion of the peace deal with the government, “we [saw light at the end] of the tunnel.”

Maguindana­o to carry the day

Maguindana­o was expected to carry the day for the BOL, with its 650,000 registered voters—the highest in the ARMM.

Maguindana­o Gov. Esmael Mangudadat­u said he voted for ratificati­on and predicted the BOL would win 95 percent of the votes in the province.

“I slept little because I had been calling our mayors and other leaders to convince their constituen­ts to vote in favor of the ratificati­on of the law,” Mangudadat­u said.

Opposition to the BOL was heaviest in Cotabato City, where the local government led the campaign to defeat the BARMM charter.

Schoolteac­hers assigned to five polling centers in Cotabato City did not show up, but 72 police officers took over the polls as election inspectors.

The Comelec’s Jimenez said the schoolteac­hers did not report for poll duty after receiving threats on their cell phones.

The Comelec had predicted a turnout of 75 percent for the plebiscite, but no overall figure was immediatel­y available after the polls closed on Monday.

Jimenez, however, declared the holding of the plebiscite “successful.”

 ?? AP ?? FORAUTONOM­Y AMuslim woman casts her ballot at an elementary school in Marawi City during a plebiscite on Monday for the ratificati­on of the law that would give the nation’s Muslim minority greater autonomy, which, it is hoped, will end a decadeslon­g conflict in Mindanao that has taken more than 120,000 lives. —
AP FORAUTONOM­Y AMuslim woman casts her ballot at an elementary school in Marawi City during a plebiscite on Monday for the ratificati­on of the law that would give the nation’s Muslim minority greater autonomy, which, it is hoped, will end a decadeslon­g conflict in Mindanao that has taken more than 120,000 lives. —
 ??  ??
 ?? —APANDJEOFF­REY MAITEM ?? THE VOTE GOES THROUGH AMuslim woman votes with ease in Marawi City (top) while in Cotabato City policemen take over as election inspectors from schoolteac­hers who have failed to report for election duty at five polling centers after receiving threats on their phones (above). Cotabato City officials oppose the ratificati­on of the Bangsamoro Organic Law.
—APANDJEOFF­REY MAITEM THE VOTE GOES THROUGH AMuslim woman votes with ease in Marawi City (top) while in Cotabato City policemen take over as election inspectors from schoolteac­hers who have failed to report for election duty at five polling centers after receiving threats on their phones (above). Cotabato City officials oppose the ratificati­on of the Bangsamoro Organic Law.
 ?? —AFPANDJEOF­FREY MAITEM ?? GOT YOU People attack a man accused of casting multiple votes at a polling center in Cotabato City (left). Murad Ebrahim, chair of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (right), votes at a polling station in Simuay, Sultan Kudarat. “Wenever thought this would happen,” he says.
—AFPANDJEOF­FREY MAITEM GOT YOU People attack a man accused of casting multiple votes at a polling center in Cotabato City (left). Murad Ebrahim, chair of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (right), votes at a polling station in Simuay, Sultan Kudarat. “Wenever thought this would happen,” he says.

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