At the rate President B. S.
Aquino 3rd is rushing Congress, against all known standards of decency, to
create an Is-lamic enclave in Mindanao for the Moro Islamic Liberation Front,
the swarm of pork-driven legislators supporting the proposed Bangsamoro Basic
Law (Babala) could soon outnumber the MILF mujaheedin who may be willing to
kill for it.
Last
week, the House ad hoc committee chaired by Cagayan de Oro Congressman Rufus
Rodriguez endorsed the Malacañang draft of the proposed Babala without any
extended debate. After assuring the public that he would unleash a number of
non-negotiable amendments, the chair made sure that no major amendment was put.
After two
meetings with Aquino, the congressmen set aside the most serious sovereignty
and territorial issues, and turned their backs on the memory of the 44 Special
Action Force police commandos who were massacred by the MILF and the Bangsamoro
Islamic Freedom Fighters at Mamasapano, Maguindanao on Jan. 25, 2015 while
try-ing to capture three international terrorists.
A
militant group has accused Aquino and the House panel of treachery and treason,
the former for bribing the lawmakers, and the latter for allowing themselves to
be bought. Sources inside Congress spoke of cold cash, rather than SAROs.
Yesterday,
at the Luneta, some protesters tried to reignite the demand for Aquino’s
“resignation,” and the aboli-tion of Congress. We saw this demand peak after
the Philippine National Police and the two Houses of Congress failed to show
Aquino’s accountability for the death of the 44 commandos who were denied
military reinforce-ment. But it began to cool after Cardinal Archbishop Luis
Antonio Tagle of Manila told an ABS-CBN TV interview in London that there was
no need for Aquino to step down, because we had only a little over a year to
suffer his bullheadedness and incompetence.
This was
echoed by some well-meaning but naïve people, who thought that having committed
so many mischiefs during the last four years, Aquino may no longer want to
commit more mischief during his last year in office. It did not occur to them
that he needed just one day to inflict grave injury upon the sovereignty and
territorial integrity of the Republic. So with just one MILF bill, he has
managed to threaten the balkanization of the Philippines.
This is
not yet done. The Bangsamoro Basic Law Bill (Bababa) is not yet a Babala,
contrary to the clever propaganda, which nearly everyone has managed to ingest.
But it now seems unstoppable like a runaway train. Malacañang has imposed a
deadline, and the congressmen and senators are under instructions to pass it
before June 12. Only Sen. Bongbong Marcos, chairman of the local government
committee, has had the courage to say he will not be dictat-ed upon by
Malacañang.
House
Bill 4994 has been powdered but not washed, and therefore not cleaned of its
unconstitutional provisions. We shall discuss some of the most obvious cases
here.
A nation within a nation
1. The use of the word Bangsamoro. Bangsa is a Malay or Bahasa word for “nation.” Does the creation of a Bang-samoro political entity mean the creation of a nation within a nation?
1. The use of the word Bangsamoro. Bangsa is a Malay or Bahasa word for “nation.” Does the creation of a Bang-samoro political entity mean the creation of a nation within a nation?
In
response to the intense public criticism, the bill’s short title has been
changed from “Bangsamoro Basic Law” to “Basic Law of the Bangsamoro Autonomous
Region.” Everywhere else in the document, however, the term “Bang-samoro”
remains untouched. Article II defines “Bangsamoro identity” as follows:
“Section
1. Bangsamoro People—Those who at the time of conquest and colonization were
considered natives or original inhabitants of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago
and their adjacent islands including Palawan and their descendants, whether of
mixed or of full blood, shall have the right to identify themselves as
Bangsamoro by as-cription or self-ascription. Spouses and their descendants are
classified as Bangsamoro.”
This
creates a citizenship for those coming from a certain part of the country,
separate and distinct from that of Filipino, which is the nationality of all
citizens of the Philippines.
If the
Bangsamoro people say they are also Filipinos, then the provision should have
been written to read like this:
“Section
1. Bangsamoro People. Citizens of the Philippines whose ancestors were
considered natives or original inhabitants of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago
and their adjacent islands including Palawan, at the time of con-quest or
colonization, whether of mixed or of full blood, shall have the right to
identify themselves as Bangsamoro by ascription or self-ascription. Spouses and
their descendants are classified as Bangsamoro.”
Now, the
national language of the Philippines is Filipino. Our laws are normally written
in English, seldom if ever in Filipino. What is the reason for using a word in
Bahasa, without sufficiently explaining its full meaning and the need for its
usage? Is it in preparation for the Bangsamoro’s eventual union with, or
incorporation into, Malaysia?
2. The
creation of a Bangsamoro parliamentary government underlines the existence of a
state or substate sepa-rate and distinct from the Republic of the Philippines.
The Bangsamoro parliamentary government as part of the presidential government
of the Philippine government creates not only a political incongruity, but a
patent consti-tutional anomaly. Assuming this situation can survive the problem
of political aesthetics, it cannot possibly survive the test of
constitutionality. Were this political hybrid permissible, only the
Constitution, not a mere act of Con-gress, could allow it.
Philippine president cannot countermand the Chief Minister
The problem assumes real life in Sec 34, Article VII of the Bababa. This provides: “Sec. 34. Call for a New Bangsamo-ro Parliament Election. — Within seventy-two (72) hours upon a two-thirds (2/3) vote of no confidence of all members of Parliament against the government of the day, the Chief Minister shall advise the President of the Republic of the Philippines to dissolve the Parliament and call for a new parliamentary election. In no case shall the President of the Republic of the Philippines countermand the advice of the Chief Minister.”
The problem assumes real life in Sec 34, Article VII of the Bababa. This provides: “Sec. 34. Call for a New Bangsamo-ro Parliament Election. — Within seventy-two (72) hours upon a two-thirds (2/3) vote of no confidence of all members of Parliament against the government of the day, the Chief Minister shall advise the President of the Republic of the Philippines to dissolve the Parliament and call for a new parliamentary election. In no case shall the President of the Republic of the Philippines countermand the advice of the Chief Minister.”
This is
normal in a parliamentary system. The power to dissolve parliament normally
resides in the sovereign, like the Queen of England in the case of Britain. Now
were this power to be given to the President of the Philippines, this should be
done by the Constitution, not by a mere act of Congress. No mere law should be
able to tell the President that he cannot countermand the advice of the Chief
Minister to dissolve parliament; this has to be an express mandate of the
Constitution.
There are
at least two instances in the Constitution when the President may not countermand
a decision of Con-gress. First, when Congress overrides the President’s veto on
a bill, by a vote of two-thirds of the two Houses of Congress, voting
separately. And second, when the Congress, voting jointly, by a vote of at
least a Majority of all its Members in regular or special session, revokes the
President’s proclamation of martial law or suspension of the privilege of the
writ of habeas corpus. In both instances, it is the Constitution, not a mere
act of Congress, that says so. Clearly, only the Constitution can create a
parliamentary government by itself, or within a presidential govern-ment, or
grant the President the power to dissolve parliament.
3. But
isn’t the “Basic Law of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region” a Constitution
instead of a mere statute?
As an
implementing measure of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB)
between the MILF and the Aquino government, it is supposed to be no more than
an act of Congress. But as written, it purports to be a Constitution. The term
“Basic Law” is used in lieu of “Constitution” in the Federal Republic of
Germany, the Hong Kong Basic Law, Basic Laws of Israel, Macau Basic Law, Basic
Law of Saudi Arabia, Basic Law for the Palestinian Na-tional Authority.
House
Bill 4994 reads more like a draft constitution than a statute. It begins with a
four paragraph Preamble, the first paragraph of which reads: “We, the
Bangsamoro people, the non-Moro indigenous peoples, Christian settlers, and the
other inhabitants of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, imploring the aid of the
Almighty God, aspiring to establish an enduring peace on the basis of justice
in our communities and a justly balanced society, and assert-ing our right to
conserve and develop our patrimony;”
The first
lines show that it is the inhabitants of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region who
are legislating this docu-ment, through Congress, and what is being legislated
is a constitution, not a mere statute. If so, this would have to be approved by
a vote of at least three-fourths of all the members of the two Houses of
Congress, voting sepa-rately. As soon as it is approved by Congress, it would
have to be submitted to a national plebiscite involving the entire electorate.
All pursuant to the Constitution. And yet none of this is being discussed in Congress.
The substate’s expansion will be easy
4. One provision that frightens some Mindanaoans is that which allows the inclusion of any area contiguous to the Bangsamoro geographical area, on the basis of a resolution by a local government unit or a petition by at least 10 percent of the registered voters in the affected area. By sheer political manipulation, a population that is totally against the BAR today could find itself part of it the next day just because the LGU administration has decided to opt for it, or because the inward migration of Islamic settlers has allowed 10 percent of the altered population to opt for it. At the same time, there is no opting out of BAR once one has become part of it.
4. One provision that frightens some Mindanaoans is that which allows the inclusion of any area contiguous to the Bangsamoro geographical area, on the basis of a resolution by a local government unit or a petition by at least 10 percent of the registered voters in the affected area. By sheer political manipulation, a population that is totally against the BAR today could find itself part of it the next day just because the LGU administration has decided to opt for it, or because the inward migration of Islamic settlers has allowed 10 percent of the altered population to opt for it. At the same time, there is no opting out of BAR once one has become part of it.
But aside
from all of the above, one major objection from those primarily concerned with
peace and order is that the rush to enact a Basic Law for BAR is not
accompanied or matched by any effort on the part of the MILF to dis-arm,
demobilize and reintegrate into the peace-loving mainstream. There is genuine
concern that the MILF armed forces would be left standing, even after the
Bababa shall have become the Babala. We could end up holding an empty bag. This
has to be averted.
I would
seriously propose that even as we challenge the constitutionality of the various
provisions, the govern-ment should insist on one absolutely necessary amendment
to the Babala. Assuming the bill passes Congress and the test of
constitutionality, it should take effect only upon completion of the
decommissioning and disarmament of the MILF forces and their reintegration into
the political mainstream, and upon signing of the “Exit Document” by the MILF
and the government. The MILF could jumpstart this process by giving back the
weapons they had con-fiscated from the fallen SAF 44 in Mamasapano, without our
having to buy them back, and by turning over to the government justice system
the MILF fighters who had slaughtered the SAF 44.
Should
the Bababa express train prevent a purging of all its constitutional defects,
we should immediately ask the Supreme Court to strike it down. But in the
opinion of lawyers like Manuel “Lolong” Lazaro of Philconsa, the
Cam-bridge-trained Jemy Gatdula of the University of Asia and the Pacific, our
good friend Manuelito Luna, and many others, it is best to ask the High Court
to declare the Bababa’s mother document, the CAB, unconstitutional now, just as
it declared its predecessor, GMA’s Memorandum of Agreement on the Ancestral
Domain, unconstitutional.
Our final
option must be better than this one, but we may have to do this before that
one. by FRANCISCO S. TATAD
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