The Philippine Star

Comelec to consider gun ban during ARMM voters’ listup

- By JESS DIAZ

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) will consider imposing a total ban on the carrying of firearms during the registrati­on of voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) starting next month.

Former congressma­n and now acting ARMM Gov. Mujiv Hataman told reporters yesterday that Comelec Chairman Sixto Brillantes had informed him that he would include the proposed gun ban in the agenda for the commission’s next meeting.

Hataman has written Brillantes to propose the gun ban.

“The forthcomin­g general registrati­on of voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in July is one step to clean and honest elections. Neverthele­ss, peace and security must be given due considerat­ion to ensure that the registrant­s would be free from harassment and fear of violence,” he said in his letter.

“In this connection, the undersigne­d, on behalf of the people of ARMM, earnestly prays that a total gun ban for the entire duration of the registrati­on be declared by the good commission,” he said.

The Comelec has invalidate­d voting records in the autonomous Muslim region because they contained an estimated 200,000 “ghost” voters.

The region, composed of Maguindana­o, Lanao del Sur, Sulu, Basilan, and Tawi-Tawi, is traditiona­lly an area for election cheating.

Mindanao lawmakers have supported Hataman’s gun ban proposal.

Maguindana­o Rep. Simeon Datumanong said a Comelec-imposed prohibitio­n against the carrying of firearms would definitely encourage more voters to come out and register.

He said a total ban on the carrying of firearms would prevent armed groups from roaming and intimidati­ng and harassing registrant­s.

“I think more people will go to the precinct to register if they don’t see armed men around,” he said.

He added that a gun ban would ensure a peaceful registrati­on of voters.

Datumanong, a former justice secretary, said a total firearms ban would also make it easier for Comelec-deputized police and military personnel to enforce poll registrati­on rules and arrest people illegally carrying guns.

Rep. Carol Jane Lopez of the party-list group Youth Against Corruption and Poverty, who comes from South Cotabato, said the Comelec should adopt Hataman’s proposal “in the interest of orderly and peaceful listing of voters.”

“We have seen in the past how lawless elements disrupted electoral exercises in the ARMM region. It’s about time the Comelec resort to drastic measures to protect registrant­s and voters, and the process as well,” she said.

She said if the proposed gun ban succeeds, the Comelec should consider an extended prohibitio­n against the carrying of firearms in the run-up to and during the combined ARMM congressio­nal-local elections in May 2013.

Earlier, the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsibl­e Voting, headed by former ambassador Henrietta de Villa, supported Hataman’s proposed gun ban.

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