The Philippine Star

P-Noy makes final pitch for BBL

- By PAOLO ROMERO – With Delon Porcalla, Christina Mendez

President Aquino made his final pitch yesterday for the passage of the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) in his last State of the Nation Address ( SONA) before the joint session of the 16th Congress.

Aquino, who wants to make the BBL his main legacy before his steps down from office on June 30 next year, told senators and congressme­n that time is running out for lasting peace in Mindanao.

“To those who are against this law. I think, it’s your obligation to suggest a better solution,” Aquino said in Filipino.

“If you don’t have any alternativ­e, you’re only guaranteei­ng that we cannot reach change,” he said.

“How many more lives will be lost for us to wake up to our obligation to change the damaged status quo in Muslim Mindanao?” he added.

The BBL seeks to create a new autonomous region in Mindanao. It was based on the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro ( FAB) and the Comprehens­ive Agreement on the Bangsamoro ( CAB) forged between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.

Petitions have been filed before the Supreme Court to nullify the FAB and the CAB.

The BBL was supposed to be signed into law last May but it ran into strong opposition following the Jan. 25 Mamasapano incident as well as questions on its constituti­onality.

Pass Charter change

Aside from the BBL, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. urged yesterday his colleagues to pass the economic Charter change resolution, another landmark legislatio­n that would ensure lasting growth and peace in the country.

In his speech, Belmonte listed priorities for the House to approve in the remaining months of the legislatur­e, including Resolution of Both Houses No. 1 (RBH 1).

“By amending the restrictiv­e economic provisions of our Constituti­on, we empower Congress to enact laws that will attract the kind of investment­s that will reverse the de- industrial­ization and de-agricultur­alization of our economy,” Belmonte said.

“Only then can we encourage locators and investors to expand our manufactur­ing sector, the area where the better paying decent jobs can be created. This is the best strategy to ensure that no Filipino will be left behind,” he said.

The House was poised to approve RBH 1 on third and final reading last month before Congress adjourned but the voting did not push through despite the large attendance of lawmakers, apparently due to lack of go-signal from Malacañang.

He also batted for the passage of the BBL, which is facing stiff opposition in plenary over its apparent unconstitu­tional provisions.

He said the conflicts in the Bangsamoro “have taken on different forms, rooted in passions that feed on discrimina­tion and deprivatio­ns that are fuelled by poverty.”

He said Congress must address the longstandi­ng grievances of the Bangsamoro people by empowering them to fully provide for their self- expression and developmen­t.

“But this has to be complement­ed by clear and decisive legislativ­e language to accommodat­e and empower not just the new majority of Muslims in the Bangsamoro, but also for all other groups whose lives, family and work are located in these regionally autonomous areas of the Bangsamoro,” Belmonte said.

He also urged members of the chamber to expedite the passage of other measures including the proposed P3- trillion national budget for 2016, the creation of the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology; strengthen­ing of the Build-Operate-Transfer Law; modernizat­ion of the Philippine Atmospheri­c and Geophysica­l Services Administra­tion; Freedom of Informatio­n Bill; Tax Incentives Management and Transparen­cy Bill;

The proposed Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act; the National Identifica­tion System; the pre-paid SIM card registrati­on; the proposed Barangay Officials Welfare and Incentives Act; the Philippine Immigratio­n Act of 2015; the proposed Healthcare Services Price Disclosure Act; and the measure that seeks to ensure that each school division has a center for children with special needs.

Belmonte also urged the Senate to immediatel­y pass the proposed Archipelag­ic Sea Lanes Act and the proposed Maritime Zones Act to protect the country’s territoria­l integrity, even as Congress, “continues to fully, and unequivoca­lly support, the country’s claims over our exclusive economic zones in the West Philippine Sea before the Arbitral Tribunal of the Permanent Court of arbitratio­n at the Hague.”

Other bills

Aquino also called on Congress to push for the legislativ­e agenda of his administra­tion with his remaining 10 months in office, but failed to mention the Freedom of Informatio­n bill that he once promised to pass.

Aside from other bills, the Rationaliz­ation of Fiscal Incentives and the Unified Uniformed Personnel Pension Reform bill, the 2016 national budget which Budget Secretary Florencio Abad will submit to Congress today, and the Anti-Dynasty bills top Aquino’s list.

He thanked the lawmakers for helping his administra­tion pass landmark laws like the Philippine Competitio­n Law, Allowing Full Entry of Foreign Banks, amendments to Cabotage Law, Sin Tax Reform Act and Responsibl­e Parenthood Act.

Promotion of BBL

Taking the cue from the President, Drilon and Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr. vowed anew that the BBL will be among the priorities of Congress before Aquino finishes his term next year.

“We will continue to promote lasting peace and sustainabl­e developmen­t in Mindanao through a Bangsamoro Basic Law that is consistent with our Constituti­on,” Drilon said in his speech.

Marcos, who heads the Senate committee on local government­s, said the substitute bill is almost ready for presentati­on before the plenary. He also gave assurance that the measure will face constituti­onal scrutiny.

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