Bangkok Post

Community takes lead to rebuild Marawi after siege

- By Rina Chandran in Manila

When Tong Pacasum was allowed back into the area where his family home once stood in Marawi on the Philippine island of Mindanao, there was nothing left for him to salvage months after a bloody siege that levelled much of the city.

But Pacasum considers himself lucky: his family is safe, and they have a title to their property, which will be a key as residents and authoritie­s begin rebuilding after the country’s biggest and fiercest urban battle in years.

Others among the 200,000 Maranaos — as residents of Marawi are known — are not as fortunate.

When pro-Islamic State rebels laid siege to the city in May 2017, everyone fled. Residents including Pacasum were allowed to inspect their homes and retrieve their belongings only recently.

Groundbrea­king — when demolition­s of all affected structures will begin — is scheduled for later this month, after a private developer is selected.

The process will take several months, after which constructi­on of roads and other public facilities will begin.

The government will then give funds to residents to construct their homes. Rebuilding Marawi could cost more than US$1 billion and will be completed by the end of 2021, officials estimate.

But the process could be delayed by questions of land ownership, said Pacasum, who helped evacuate people during the siege.

“It’s going to be a huge challenge, as a lot of residents don’t have titles to their properties, even though they have been living there for generation­s,” said Pacasum, who has participat­ed in consultati­ons with other residents and officials on the plans for rebuilding.

“If we don’t do it right, it will cause more pain and suffering, and we have already suffered so much”

Muslims as well as indigenous people have been caught in the middle of a five-decade insurgency in Mindanao, exacerbate­d by loggers and mining companies eager to tap its rich resources including gold, copper and nickel.

President Rodrigo Duterte has called the island a “flashpoint for trouble” and atrocities by Islamist and communist rebels. Martial law imposed in May 2017 remains in place until the end of the year.

Conflict over land was one of the major triggers of violence in Mindanao even before the siege, and could be a “make or break” issue in the rehabilita­tion of Marawi, according to a recent report by The Asia Foundation.

Failure to address land issues could stoke further conflict and push more people into extremism, it said.

A solution may lie in a more participat­ory effort led by the community, said Ica Fernandez, a spatial planner and co-author of the report, who is part of an initiative called Open Marawi, which had made recommenda­tions based on community feedback.

“A community-led effort is essential because of the history of Mindanao as an autonomous Muslim region,” she said.

“The people have the right to self-determinat­ion, the right to decide their future. Especially in this case, when we have to also rely on memories and emotional associatio­ns to reimagine the city, we need everyone to be involved.”

There is a complex system of ownership, tenure and use of land in Marawi and in Mindanao, including practices that predate the Philippine nation-state.

A community-led rehabilita­tion is particular­ly relevant, as “many pre-colonial, traditiona­l, and informal governance structures and practices around land, housing, and property” are practised alongside laws, according to The Asia Foundation.

The government has establishe­d a Land Dispute Arbitratio­n Committee to address concerns, and officials have said that in the absence of a title, residents may present tax receipts and certificat­es from municipal officials.

“We will ensure all issues on land ownership are resolved,” said Adoracion Navarro, an official at Marawi’s regional developmen­t office.

The rehabilita­tion will “take i nto account the demographi­c compositio­n of a predominan­tly Muslim population, the Marano culture, and existing capacities of communitie­s”, he said.

More than 900 militants, 165 troops and police, and about 45 civilians were killed in the Marawi siege.

The siege forced more than 300,000 people from their homes in the once picturesqu­e lakeside town. Some were housed in transition­al housing built by the government, while others stayed with relatives, or simply lived in tent cities.

Open Marawi has brought residents, officials and planners together to draw a blueprint for the city, Fernandez said.

Residents want better facilities, but have rejected plans for strict commercial and residentia­l zoning — with businesses on the ground floor and residences on the upper floors — which are contrary to the traditiona­l mixed-use structures, she said.

Importantl­y, Marawi’s informal land market and multiple titling systems make it imperative to determine occupancy before the debris is cleared, she said.

“We have to work at the block, street and parcel level to establish occupancy rather than ownership,” she said.

“We need a social tenure assessment rather than a purely legal one, because there are physical, cultural, political and security factors.”

Fernandez and other experts are pushing officials to start demolition­s only after documentin­g occupancy and ownership, as residents otherwise risk losing walls and pillars that may be the only markers of their properties.

Pacasum, who is eager to start rebuilding his home, is hopeful that the community will lead the developmen­t of a better Marawi.

As most mosques in the only designated Islamic city in the mainly Catholic Philippine­s were damaged by heavy machinegun fire, he converted what was left of his home into a makeshift mosque for the holy month of Ramadan.

Neighbours donated carpets and fixed lights and fans.

“Everyone is having a hard time, as everyone has to start rebuilding homes and livelihood­s,” he said. “But the fact that we could come together to do this is a sign that we can, as a community, do anything.”

Thomson Reuters Foundation

“It’s going to be a huge challenge, as a lot of residents don’t have titles to their properties, even though they have been living there for generation­s” TONG PACASUM Marawi resident

 ??  ?? Residents walk past a bullet-ridden house believed to have been rented earlier by militants in Basak in Malutlut district of Marawi in October last year.
Residents walk past a bullet-ridden house believed to have been rented earlier by militants in Basak in Malutlut district of Marawi in October last year.

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