After a
week of negotiations, the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front
(MILF) are nowhere near resolving the thorny issues that had delayed the
crafting of a final draft agreement that will be the basis for establishing a
Bangsamoro region in Mindanao.
On Thursday, MILF chief negotiator Mohagher Iqbal accused President
Benigno Aquino 3rd of turning his back on his promise that the government will
be flexible in its application of the Constitution to the Bangsamoro Basic Law
(BBL).
Iqbal noted that the President made the promise before the signing of
the Comprehensive Agreement on Bangsamoro (CAB) in March this year.
He, however, said MalacaƱang’s legal office almost entirely changed the
BBL draft when the office reviewed the draft crafted by the Bangsamoro
Transition Commission (BTC).
“Most of
their comments are really on the basis of the integrity of the Philippine
Constitution. That’s the problem,” Iqbal added.
“[They’re]
very restrictive. What we’re looking for is the flexibility that they promised
to us,” he said.
Although
the MILF chief negotiator acknowledged that there were some gray areas in the
process of the submission of the BBL to MalacaƱang, Iqbal noted that it was
never said in the agreement that “when it reached the Office of the President,
they would not touch it, but it was not stated also that they could touch it.”
But
despite these roadblocks, Iqbal said they remain confident that the peace
process would be completed if the signed agreement was not amended.
“As long
as the two parties would stick to two principles, one is they still commit that
there is really a need to finish this process, and then the second principle is
that the signed agreement should not be amended, I think we can finish this
one,” he added.
The
government and MILF panels will be on their eighth day of negotiations today
but Iqbal said the negotiators still failed to thresh out the most contentious
provisions of the proposed Bangsamoro law.
“We are
making progress and there are a lot of contentious issues that the two parties
were able to [solve]… but of course the most contentious issues are still
unresolved,” he told ANC.
Iqbal
disclosed that the biggest obstacles were the provisions on the extent of
“power” that would be granted to the Bangsamoro government and wealth sharing.
“These
are the biggest obstacles in our discussions. It’s about powers, and it’s about
resources,” he said.
The
annexes on power and wealth sharing were part of the initial framework
agreement that the two parties signed.
Under the
initial agreement, the proposed Bangsamoro government would have its own law
enforcers, which some observers say violates the constitutional provision of
one national police.
On wealth
distribution, the two panels agreed on a 50-50 sharing on fossil fuels, which
refer to mineral deposits like coal, uranium, petroleum and natural gas; and
75-25, in favor of the MILF, on the sharing on metallic minerals, among others.
Government
chief negotiator Miriam Coronel-Ferrer also on Thursday denied reports that the
peace deal with the MILF is nearing collapse.
“Things
are going on smoothly and we are confident of reaching a consensus on this.
We’ve covered a lot of ground and the ceasefire is very much in place,” she
told The Manila Times.
Ferrer
noted that the two panels are doing a lot of balancing on the BBL draft so that
it would pass the scrutiny of Congress.
She
downplayed the MILF complaint on deletions and revisions on the draft law,
saying it was done to make it “lean and neat.”
“Some of
the deletions were made because there were repetitions in other parts of the
draft law. There are so many provisions, for instance, that are replicated in
the current part of the article, and that’s the kind of cleaning up that we are
doing now, to make sure it will be a lean and neat law without sacrificing any
of the provisions or the principles that we have already upheld in the
comprehensive agreement,” Ferrer explained.
The
government had planned to endorse the draft BBL to Congress in May but a final
draft is yet to be crafted because of the MILF’s refusal to accept a “diluted”
version.
Sen.
Francis Escudero said Congress can pass the law within the year if the draft is
submitted by September.
The
senator added that all stakeholders in Mindanao should have been consulted
before a draft law was crafted to avoid the pitfalls of the Memorandum of
Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD), which was later declared
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
“The road
to peace in Mindanao is a delicate issue. Our peace panel should find the right
approach [that] does not isolate anyone. The direct participation of local and
religious leaders, representatives of tribes and clans should be solicited.
Inclusivity should be one of the major bases for the talk,” Escudero said. by WILLIAM B.
DEPASUPIL AND CATHERINE S. VALENTE
With
JEFFERSON ANTIPORDA
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