There is
still no peace in Muslim Mindanao. A recent agreement to grant the region
autonomy had support but is now in limbo after 44 policemen were killed in the
region on 25 January 2015. So why has peace eluded Mindanao for so long? And
how much longer will Mindanao have to wait for the missing peace?
A major reason behind the historical inability to come up
with a cohesive and lasting peace
plan for Mindanao has to do with
an orthodox explanation. An
explanation that is shared by the
most disparate of social and
political forces — government officials, Muslim separatists, communists, public
intellectuals, the media and even all-knowing development experts. It
is an orthodoxy that has
consistently promoted a narrative that assumes a history of unceasing conflict
on the country’s second biggest island. It puts a high premium on minority –
majority tensions, religion as an inspirational force for armed change and the
omnipresence of a capable state and its coercive apparatuses in the Philippine
south.
On the contrary, Muslim Mindanao has a far more complex history, and
this is what the orthodoxy has papered over. Conflict, in particular, has been
the exception rather than the rule, and where it did happen this was mostly
caused by factors other than religion. The orthodoxy has not only widely
exaggerated the omnipresence and capacity of the Philippine state but also
understated the power of local Muslim elites — and, as such, underestimated
their role in both the war and the quest for peace in the umma (nation).
Conflict with the state has been intermittent. During the colonial
period revolts were few, and when they did occur they were motivated less by
grand visions than by localised exigent demands, including taxation, abuses by
colonial officials, the end of the slave trade, and intra-elite conflict. These
multifaceted and localised forms of militant engagement with outside powers
continued to be the norm even in the era of the separatist rebellions.
Resistance was also paralleled
by a prolonged period of
Muslim collaboration with their supposed enemies. Muslim elites did not
hesitate to work with national partners to
keep their authority over
their local constituents. This is the singular advantage that these
‘traditional’ leaders armed with modern political designations (senator,
congressman) have over their rebel rivals. With their longer history, social
embeddedness, and ability to make political adjustments, Muslim elites have
come to outwit the state and outlast the separatists. Manila’s authority in the
Muslim zones was and continues to be mediated through local power.
The orthodox narrative also highlights the various government
colonisation schemes as a cause of
the conflict. What it does not
tell us
is that
these programs failed. They fell victim to limited budgets, corruption and
inefficiency in Manila as well as
in the field sites. A Land
Settlement Development Corporation became
‘an agency of incompetent
political appointees and corrupters’ that made, as US agriculture expert
Merrill Abbey points out, the ‘fast clearance of land titles next to impossible
to accomplish’.
The Bureau of Lands, which was supposed to oversee the organised
distribution of homestead settlements, was, as economist Peter Krinks
contended, ‘hampered by the wartime destruction of records, the lack of funds
and by the illicit intervention of politicians’. The consequences of this
inefficient state delivery system were dramatic. Hunger and famine stalked many
communities.
But the clashes only started with the filling up of the frontier and the
determination of President Ferdinand Marcos to assert central state authority.
By the 1960s spontaneous migration filled up the frontier as 1.2 million people
settled in the region. But this alone did not immediately lead to clashes with
Muslims. Settlers and Muslims coexisted peacefully, trading in marketplaces
where goods and harvests were sold. Peace was ensured by the Muslim elites who
saw the settlers as new electoral constituents. But then President Ferdinand
Marcos asserted central state authority.
In his first three years in power, Marcos vowed to pursue an
economic program that would
integrate Mindanao into the national development plan. He reconfigured local
politics by promoting new strongmen and expanded the national army’s presence
all to challenge the old Muslim elites.
All these became the catalysts for the first separatist war led by the
Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) — the Philippines’ only conventional war
after World War II. But after more than a year, battlefield losses forced the
MNLF to revert to guerrilla warfare. The organisation also split with the
largest breakaway group forming the rival Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
Marcos fell in 1986 and his successor, Corazon Aquino, restored constitutional
politics.
The MNLF splintered further
after 1986 and an ageing and
tired leadership finally signed a peace agreement with the government
10 years later. Many MNLF
leaders established themselves as new players in their localities, becoming
legislators, provincial governors and city and town mayors.
The MILF filled the void left by the MNLF, flexing its muscle in a
series of brutal confrontations with the army in the late 1990s and early
2000s. But its war was largely defensive, and it was never able to expand the
area under its control. After a series of failed negotiations, the MILF finally
signed an agreement with the government on 24 January 2014. MILF agreed to
the creation of a new autonomous region with the power to raise its own
revenues and have its own regional army. A bill was then introduced for the
Philippine legislature to pass.
But on 25 January 2015, a secret police operation to capture two terrorists
hiding in MILF territory turned awry and 44 policemen
were killed. An angry public
forced supporters to postpone legislative hearing on the bill. There was
unanimity that the MILF was at fault and must account for the massacre.
And now there is still no peace in Muslim Mindanao.
Patricio N. Abinales is a
professor at the Asian Studies Program, University of Hawaii, Manoa. This
article appeared in the most recent edition of the East Asia
Forum Quarterly, ‘Asia’s Minorities‘.
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