Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Govt eyes new B’moro autonomy

- RYAN D. ROSAURO | Correspond­ent

ILIGAN CITY—Presidenti­al adviser on the peace process Jesus Dureza is eyeing the creation of a new Bangsamoro autonomy ahead of the shift to a federal form of government which is among the priorities of the government of President Duterte.

Speaking to reporters in Manila before flying to Kuala Lumpur on Friday, Dureza said he is hoping the effort to draft and eventually enact the new autonomy law will precede the ripening of the federalism effort.

“We hope to entrench the Bangsamoro ahead of federalism (because) we want it to be a pilot federal state,” Dureza stressed.

The writing of a fresh proposal for an autonomy law will be up for talks when government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) renew their formal engagement through the re-launch Saturday of the implementa­tion of the Comprehens­ive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) in Kuala Lumpur.

Dureza said a high-level delegation will represent the government in the ceremonies.

Apart from Dureza, the government delegation includes Secretarie­s Perfecto Yasay of Foreign Affairs and Mike Sueno of Interior and Local Government­s, National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr., House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III, and Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Gov. Mujiv Hataman.

According to Dureza, the re-launch of CAB implementa­tion in Kuala Lumpur is to “give due recognitio­n to the assistance of Malaysia during the negotiatio­n stage.”

In an earlier statement, Dureza cited that “the Malaysians have contribute­d enormously in the negotiatio­n stage.”

“Therefore, we thought it’s fitting to give them that due recognitio­n for their contributi­ons to our peace efforts by launching the implementa­tion stage in Kuala Lumpur,” he said.

Malaysia facilitate­d negotiatio­ns between the government and the MILF since 2001 when talks resumed a year following an all-out war waged by then President Joseph Estrada in March 2000. The process has resulted to the forging of the CAB on March 27, 2014, ending a 17-year political negotiatio­n that began in January 1997.

Principall­y, the CAB seeks the creation of a new autonomous entity that will have wider powers than and replace the current ARMM. In exchange, the MILF ends its rebellion against the Philippine state as indicated by the gradual decommissi­oning of its fighting force.

CAB implementa­tion has stalled following the failure by the 16th Congress to pass the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) that could have given birth to the new autonomy setup and began the substantiv­e decommissi­oning process.

After the launching rites, Dureza said the implementi­ng panels from both parties will meet. The government panel is composed of Irene Santiago as chair, Undersecre­taries Nabil Tan and Diosita Andot, and Assistant secretarie­s Dickson Hermoso and Rolando Asuncion, as members.

Although the MILF made no prior announceme­nt, its panel is expectedly headed by Mohagher Iqbal, the rebel group’s informatio­n chief and old hand in the peace process with government. Despite the stalled CAB implementa­tion toward the end of President Benigno Aquino’s administra­tion, the MILF has never disbanded its peace panel.

The meeting of the panels will be the first formal one under the Duterte administra­tion. Prior to this schedule, there have been about three informal meetings between government and the MILF.

This includes one between Mr. Duterte and MILF chief Murad Ebrahim in Davao City, and between Dureza and Murad inside the rebel group administra­tive base, Camp Darapanan, in Sultan Kudarat, Maguindana­o.

In Mr. Duterte’s Bangsamoro peace roadmap, government seeks the convergenc­e of the peace processes with the MILF and Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), the main group that first waged the Moro rebellion in 1972 that later split up into factions.

The MNLF inked the Final Peace Agreement (FPA) with government on Sept. 2, 1996.

Before flying to Kuala Lumpur, Dureza held a meeting in Davao City on Tuesday with former Cotabato City mayor Muslimin Sema who heads the largest of the MNLF factions called the Council of 15.

Sema has earlier joined hands with the MILF in finding ways to harmonize the respective peace pacts of the government with the MNLF and MILF.

Under the said roadmap, all Bangsamoro peace agreements—the MILF’s CAB, MNLF’s FPA—as well the key results of the 10-year-old GPH-Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n-MNLF Tripartite Review Process on FPA implementa­tion, will be integrated into the new enabling law that will create the new Bangsamoro autonomy replacing the ARMM.

BTC expansion

According to Dureza, up for discussion among the panels will be the reconstitu­tion of the Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) that will draft the proposed charter of the new autonomy.

He hinted that government is inclined to propose that the BTC be expanded beyond 15 members as spelled out in the CAB.

By expanding the BTC membership, Dureza said it will be able to “include leaders of the MNLF, officials of the ARMM, and other sectors in Mindanao for it to be inclusive.”

Dureza explained that in crafting the enabling law, “all sectors in the Bangsamoro must be adequately represente­d” and “come together.”

During his meeting with Dureza, Sema “expressed his commitment to join the BTC,” said a news release of the Office of the Presidenti­al Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP).

Currently, the BTC is composed of eight members nominated by the MILF and seven by the government. All 15 are appointed by the President.

Apart from the compositio­n of the BTC, the meeting of the panels will also discuss key provisions in the CAB that can already be implemente­d, including the delivery of socioecono­mic developmen­t programs in Mindanao, Dureza added.

“The people must feel the peace dividends while the political track, which is concerned with legislatin­g the enabling law, is ongoing,” Santiago said.

Dureza said that while in Kuala Lumpur, the government delegation will brief the Malaysian government about the peace and developmen­t roadmap of the Duterte administra­tion which will be capped by a call on Prime Minister Najib Razak on Sunday, August 14.

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