Peace and development in Mindanao
MANILA, Philippines — War against the MILF and
NDF-NPA is not an option. Enduring peace and inclusive, sustainable development
– through our unity of purpose, solidarity in values, and teamwork in
nation-building – must be the triumphal outcome of today’s collective efforts,
as in earlier years.
But, we also say: “Okay for all-out war for
justice, all-out war against poverty/deprivation, all-out war against
corruption and incompetence, all-out war against organized crime.”
For leaders of our 1986 EDSA People Power
Revolution one generation ago, elected incumbents, and today’s family heads,
plus concerned Filipinos who assume governance responsibilities after 2013 and
2016 (election years), the above-cited exhortation is the overwhelming
sentiment.
Raging debates among the P.Noy Government,
MILF, and civil society as reported by media and foreign observers, make it
timely indeed to review what had transpired before in order to regroup the
entire Filipino Family. All of us on board our one and only Ship “Pilipinas”
(including national/local officials, OFWs, dual citizens, foreign locators, and
the unborn) need to move faster forward to a better Philippine future.
Let us plug the holes in our leaky, slow boat
– not put in new ones. Unfortunately, some war-freaks who have never
experienced hostile combat situations or prolonged suffering are among those
who always want “bang-bang-bang” – just like in the movies.
Justice
is inclusive
Muslim scholars emphasize that “the Qur’an, taken
as a whole, gives messages of hope, faith, and peace... to be found through
faith in God and justice among fellow humans.”
Says Isaiah (32:17) in the Bible: “Because
everyone works for justice, there will be peace and security forever.” This
prophecy was the lead topic in our Bulletin column of 25 November 2007.
There we opined: “The GRP-MILF and the GRP-NDF
agreements are within reach – if only clear focus, dedicated implementation (of
agreed programs), and consistent political will are applied upon the remaining
issues by the principals. Ultimately, the GRP, at all levels down to the
barangays – under the overall supervision of the President/Commander-in-Chief –
carries the burden of responsibility to insure that the final outcomes are
enduring peace and sustainable development – not just of affected areas – but
Philippines-wide.”
The mobilization of the support of civil
society and ordinary people is undeniably the GRP’s mandate and not to be
relegated to foreign entities.
Effective
ceasefire (July, 1997-April, 2000)
Let us recall that immediately after the Final
Peace Agreement with the MNLF on 02 September 1996, FVR tasked then Executive
Secretary Ruben Torres to meet with MILF Vice-Chair Ghazali Jaafar to start
peace negotiations.
Within a week (on 10 September), Torres and
Jaafar agreed to the creation of a Joint Committee to prepare a ceasefire and
favorable conditions for negotiations. Meantime, FVR designated Ambassador
Fortunato Abat as GRP Panel Chair to work with MILF counterparts.
On 18 July 1997 in Cagayan de Oro, the GRP and
MILF Panels signed the “Agreement for General Cessation of Hostilities” (in
effect, a ceasefire, that lasted for the next 30 months). On 06 February 1998,
the “Agreement to Sustain the Quest for Peace” was forged in Marawi by
Technical Committee Chairpersons (GRP-ASec Jovenal Lazaga and MILF-Shiekh Moner
Bajunaid) and the “Cessation of Hostilities” Sub-Committees (GRP-MGen Joselin
Nazareno and MILF-Omar Umpar). Both parties agreed on: (1) repositioning GRP
forces in Buldon, Maguindanao; (2) resolution of watershed issues involving the
Minabay-Banganan-Ambal Rivers; (3) suspension of logging by Cotabato Timber
Company and others; and (4) formation of joint Quick Response Teams.
Perseverance on both sides resulted in
significant reductions of hostilities and, therefore,
casualties/dislocation/collateral damage throughout Mindanao.
Ceasefire/peace
dividends
The 30 precious ceasefire months spurred
Mindanao’s development and the blossoming of the
Brunei-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area.
Upon assumption in July, 1997, of Lieutenant
General Orlando Soriano, former CG, PA, then Head, National Irrigation
Administration, as GRP Panel Chair to replace Ambassador Abat (who assumed
higher duties), community development started in MILF enclaves at the
Maguindanao-Lanao Sur-Cotabato tri-border.
To our pleasant surprise, Soriano soon asked
clearance to undertake three projects: (1) installing potable water systems for
Camp Abubakar, using solarpower; (2) irrigating 2,500 hectares of farmland
around Abubakar from the Malmar System (then 90% finished); and (3) concreting the 15-km. road to Abubakar
from the highway between Cotabato City and Malabang, Lanao Sur.
Initially requested by Chairman Salamat, FVR
quickly approved these projects and released p100 million therefor. The entry
of AFP Engineers reinforced by civilians to work inside Camp Abubakar with MILF
cooperation (while AFP-PNP units controlled surrounding areas) resembled the
“Trojan Horse” situation in military strategy – which substantially improved
chances of success towards final agreement.
This was the non-violent breakthrough both
sides hoped for. Unfortunately, the favorable situation didn’t last because of
President Estrada’s “All-Out War Policy” in April, 2000.
The
shattered peace
Alas, the prolonged 30-month ceasefire did not
endure. The AFP-PNP and MILF are still fighting today.
The expanding environment of peace was
tragically shattered by Estrada’s ill-conceived order in late April 2000 to
attack Camp Abubakar – during which mosques were destroyed, MILF mujahideens
escaped to fight from other sanctuaries, and thousands of families fled to
avoid the crossfire.
Media reports made much of Estrada’s angry
temper during late April, 2000, starting with his 63rd birthday on 19 April.
What should have been a joyful period turned into a bitter pill with the Abu
Sayyaf kidnapping on 23 April of foreign tourists in Sipadan, Sabah, and their
transfer to Basilan. This sudden blow was compounded by the tragic crash –
three days before – of an Air Philippines airliner near Davao City where all
131 persons aboard perished.
Evidencing Erap’s vengeful mood were his
celebrations of Abubakar’s fall with truckloads of “lechon” and beer for the
“victorious” troops. Such mindless desecration of Muslim sensitivities was
resented by the MILF as intensely as the Abubakar devastation, including the
destruction of water systems (operationalized August, 1997) and irrigation networks.
Confidence-building measures attained thru
cooperative efforts between GRP Chairman Soriano and MILF Chairman Salamat were
wasted.
Recognition
of MILF camps
Frequently circulated by Estrada drumbeaters
is the alleged “recognition” of MILF main camps by the Ramos Administration –
which misinformed people believe to this day. The official record, however,
proves the contrary.
The plain truth is that during Erap’s time, on
10 February 1999, Camps Abubakar and Busrah were acknowledged as MILF Camps
(First Joint Acknowledgment); and on 06 October 1999, Camps Bilal in Lanao Sur,
Rajamuda in Cotabato/Maguindanao; Darapanan/Usama, Al-Khattab, and Badre – all in Maguindanao –
were further recognized as MILF Camps (Second Joint Acknowledgment).
Historical distortions still occasionally
appear in media and op-ed articles, obviously to justify – albeit wrongly –
Estrada’s war policy that torpedoed not only the prospects of a final peace
settlement, but also Mindanao’s sustainable development.
Mindanao
war costs
Statistics presented during the Cabinet-OPAPP
briefing for Congressional leaders last 04 August 2008 showed that during
1970-1996, the AFP spent some P73 billion for arms/ammunition against the MNLF
and its splinter groups (MILF included) – on top of loss of lives and
socio-economic costs.
Estrada’s “All-Out War Policy” launched April,
2000, resulted in an average of P20 million spent daily for three months (total
P1.8 billion). Despite heavy spending, that offensive cost the lives of 431
soldiers and 624 wounded. Moreover, infrastructure damage amounted to P202
million, plus P125 million worth of agri-products destroyed.
In 2003, when measurable progress restarted in
Mindanao, the military overran the Buliok complex (MILF command center after
Camp Abubakar) in campaigns against kidnap-for-ransom groups. Because of
MILF-KFRG atrocities, some P47 million worth of agricultural produce was
destroyed and P130 million in infrastructure damaged.
Thus, the direct costs of renewed Mindanao war
from April, 2000, to December, 2003, amounted to some P2.3 billion, as revealed
in said briefing.
War’s
social costs
More than body-counts and direct damage, war’s
social costs were even greater.
Per DSWD figures, some one million persons
were displaced/ rendered homeless by Estrada’s war policy starting in April,
2000. Due to crackdowns on the Abu Sayyaf Group, 200,000 more people were
dislocated. That number increased in 2003 with additional 750,000 evacuees.
From 2000 to 2004, therefore, 2,000,000 people became “internal refugees,”
losing both homes and livelihood in Mindanao.
The 2005 Philippine Human Development Report
records that “All-Out War” and ASG atrocities caused Mindanao investment growth
to plunge from plus 17% to minus 5% in 2000-2001, resulting in its negative
growth. Considering both explicit and implicit economic losses, OPAPP reported
that from 1975 to 2002, losses in Mindanao ranged from P5 to P10 billion annually,
which totals an astronomical P135 to P270 billion for 27 years!!
DO FILIPINOS WANT WAR OR PEACE?
“In this moment of crisis, people say charity
starts at home. But unless you come from
another planet, we have only one home.
So we’d better take good care of it.” — OECD Sec-Gen Angel Gurria, UN
Convention on Climate Change Durban, South Africa, December 2011
Years ago, we recognized the intimate
intertwining – nay, the irreversible unity – of the environment with population
and sustainable development, and the need to address these three components of
God’s bounty as an integrated, converged and synergistic roadmap to a better
future.
Balancing
environment, people and sustainability
As early as 01 September 1992, we established
the multi-sectoral/multi-stakeholder Philippine Council on Sustainable
Development by EO 15, under the chairmanship of then NEDA Secretary Cielito
Habito. The PCSD included the DENR Secretary as vice chairman, and 14 other
department heads as members. As civil society counterparts, seven
NGO-representatives from key sectors were chosen as PCSD members.
The judicious management of the environment,
population, and development would guarantee the well-being of each Filipino and
our place of respect in the family of nations – which we used to occupy.
The broad PCSD mandate is to move the country
capably and competitively into the 21st century – in effect, to implement the
strategy adopted by the United Nations in its seminal Conference on Environment
and Development (UNCED or “The Earth Summit”) in Rio de Janeiro in June, 1992.
Our Philippine Agenda for the coming century was thus grounded on universal
principles and “best practices.”
By virtue of EO 370 promulgated 26 September
1996, PCSD was strengthened by the inclusion of two additional members each
from the labor and private business sectors, and the provision for a review/
evaluation system. As NEDA chairman, FVR presided over PCSD meetings which,
occasionally, included Congressional leaders as consultants.
This is how the PCSD stands today in the
pursuit of a doable “Philippine Agenda 21.”
PA
21 Reforms; Quality Population
In 1996, FVR convened the National
Anti-Poverty Summit which paved the way for the enactment of the “Social Reform
and Poverty Alleviation Act” (RA 8425) on 11 December 1997, which still stands.
Also in 1996, we established a National Marine Policy for properly managing
coastal zones and optimizing offshore/oceanic resources along the principles of
sustainable development. To ensure proper implementation, periodic reviews were
institutionalized pursuant to PA 21.
Meanwhile, on 5-13 September 1994, the Cairo
UN International Conference on Population Development adopted significant
paradigm shifts in family and population management. It was the largest global
conference on population and development ever held – with 11,000 participants from
179 countries representing governments, academe, media, and NGOs. NEDA
Secretary Ciel Habito headed the Philippine delegation which was among the most
sought-after groups because our national policy was seen as a balanced paradigm
that respected the same three integral components for humankind’s
sustainability: Population, environment, and development.
We focused at the time on the balancing of
Earth’s carrying capacity – a principle now universally accepted by way of
population quality, environmental protection, and sustainable growth as the key
mandates to insure human security.
The ICPD Program of Action seeks to “raise the
quality of life for all peoples through appropriate population development
policies aimed at achieving poverty eradication, sustainable development, and
guarantee of all human rights, including people empowerment.”
Blessed Pope John Paul II at the Holy See in
September 1994, in a joyful audience with FVR, expressed his appreciation of
the Philippine population policy articulated at the then on-going Cairo ICPD.
UN
Benchmarks
ICPD opened a new era of willingness by the
international community and governments to integrate population quality and
socio-economic progress, with these UN benchmarks:
(1) Reproductive healthcare and unmet needs
for contraception. By 2015, 100% of primary healthcare facilities should offer
the widest range of safe, effective modern methods to prevent/manage
reproductive infections.
(2) Reduction of maternal mortality. By 2015,
maternal mortality rate should be reduced to half the 2000 rate.
(3) Reduction of infant mortality. By 2015,
countries should have infant mortality rate of 35 per 1,000 live births and
under “age 5” mortality of 45 per 1,000 – or less.
(4) Access to reproductive/sexual health
services. Countries should strive to access reproductive and health services to
all individuals of appropriate age NLT 2015.
(5) HIV/AIDS. At least 95% of both sexes aged
15-24 should, by 2010, have access to information/services necessary to reduce
HIV/AIDS vulnerability.
(6) Universal education. Primary school
enrollment for both sexes should be at least 90% by 2010, 100% by 2015.
Our ICPD commitments were approved by FVR
because they placed people at the center of development, and put family
planning within a broader framework based on the principles of human rights,
health/longevity, socio-economic justice, and environmental sustainability.
The
bountiful seas
We know sea-based activities make sizeable
contributions to Asia-Pacific economies. But access to littoral areas/coasts
can be uneven.
A multi-disciplinary UN study shows that
coastal economies fare better in “ease of doing business” than landlocked ones.
Recognition of this handicap was the underlying reason for the UN Conference on
the Law of the Sea to provide special provisions so that landlocked states
could benefit from UNCLOS.
It is of high significance, therefore, that
landlocked Laos is now a partner in the “Partnerships in Environmental
Management for the Seas of East Asia.” This was after ASEAN, with the
assistance of development partners, accelerated its Mekong River Programs to
provide Laos’ access to the South China Sea thru riverways across Vietnam.
The responsible stewardship of our
oceans/coasts can cushion us from the impact of human-induced crises like
economic recession and those caused by natural hazards.
Climate
change affects all
In mid-July, 2009, the Philippines created the
Commission on Climate Change, now chaired by former Senator/DENR Secretary
Heherson Alvarez. Before its implementation with preventive/safety measures for
vulnerable communities, typhoons Ketsana (Ondoy) and Parma (Pepeng) ravaged our
population centers with great damage to life and property.
The main lessons learned from those two
disasters and also from equally destructive Washi (Sendong) is that current
measures for people’s safety are not appreciated enough by planners. While
communities did their best to cope with nature’s wrath, and while we saw
outstanding acts of life-saving, these are never enough to overcome the
suffering generated by the neglect or abuse of the environment.
We need vision, innovation, fresh
perspectives, and practical approaches. Most of all, leaders need to be
steadfast in exercising their political will.
Legislation is essential, but even where laws
and budgets are in place, they are not enough without political will. The
enactment of international covenants, national laws, and local ordinances is
not the end point.
Marine
survey of Kalayaan Islands Group
In 1996, FVR gave official authority to the
initiatives of then DOST Secretary William Padolina supported by DENR Secretary
Angel Alcala and Edgardo Gomez, UP Marine Science Director (both eminent marine
biologists and my scuba-diving buddies) to undertake a three-year program to
explore the Kalayaan Islands Group in the Spratlys, together with a select
group of other Asia-Pacific scientists.
This Philippine research project is recorded
in a landmark book, “The Kalayaan Islands – Our Natural Heritage” (U.P. 2003).
Its findings were most encouraging in terms of confidence-building,
benefit-sharing, and resource development of the KIG.
In the light of the race for energy resources
led by the US and China (dubbed “the oiloholics”), our earlier efforts to
promote the peaceful, cooperative development of the Spratlys promise to bear
fruit from our greater appreciation of their criticality.
However, there is bad news, according to Dr.
Ed Gomez in Tropical Coasts (July, 2011): “More than just the variety of
animal, plant, bacterial, and viral species, biodiversity includes the
relationships connecting us all to one another. This richness and variety of
life and ecosystems plays an essential role in keeping our world functioning.
“Only in the past two decades have we begun to
better appreciate our ‘global commons’ – or the entirety of the environment.
The preoccupations of daily living make us oblivious to the dangers threatening
fragile ecosystems worldwide. We’re equally negligent in disregarding our
responsibility to care for Mother Earth.
“The astounding variety of life on Earth is
rapidly disappearing before our eyes. Thousands of species face extinction.
Approximately 13 million hectares of the world’s forests (the size of Greece)
are lost annually due to human activities.”
Above concerns have been thoroughly discussed
in various events hosted by the Philippines, the latest being the Global
Conference on Land-Ocean Connections under UN auspices last January.
Better
act now
That Philippine officials (at all levels) and
private sector leaders must act now, instead of tomorrow, is an imperative.
Let us recall that the fundamental assessment
by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change headed by Nobel Peace
Laureate (2007) Rajendra Pachauri, is that:
“HUMANS ARE THE MOST DESTRUCTIVE TO THE
ENVIRONMENT BECAUSE OF THEIR WILL TO VIOLATE, ABUSE, AND NEGLECT.”
FIDEL V. RAMOS (Former Philippine President)
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