
ZAMBOANGA CITY (Al Jacinto / Jan. 25, 2014) – The Philippines and the country’s largest Muslim rebel group Moro Islamic Liberation Front have signed Saturday the final and last of the four annexes to the Moro homeland in Mindanao.
Peace negotiators also signed the addendum on Muslim territorial waters in the southern Philippines in the talks held in Malaysia. The signing of the Annex on Normalization would pave the way for a peace deal that would put an end to decades of bloody fighting in Mindanao.
Presidential peace adviser Teresita Deles praised the outcome of the negotiations and said the last of the four Annexes to the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro paves the way for the signing of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro.
“This is indeed a long-awaited moment that is a gift to our people at the start of a new year of renewed hope and commitment. It has been a very difficult road arriving at this major milestone of the peace process,” she said.
Deles said in crafting the annexes, the Philippine peace panel sought at every point to abide by President Benigno Aquino’s instructions that all peace agreements to be signed must be consistent with the Constitution, including its flexibilities and must be in accordance with the capacity of the parties to deliver politically, economically, culturally and in all ways necessary.
“It has been a difficult road getting to here and we know that the path ahead will continue to be fraught with challenges. As we celebrate this moment, we also affirm our readiness to undertake the tasks that shall ensure the full and satisfactory implementation of this agreement, together with the MILF, other partners and stakeholders,” she said.
Deles said there will be new arrangements and mechanisms set up for the peace panels and assisted by selected third-parties and independent bodies, to work together on the multiple tracks that will ensure the transformation of MILF forces and conflict-affected communities from the harsh ways of war to the nurturance of partnership and cooperation—all these to unleash the unlimited potentials for the development of Mindanao, especially for the communities so long left behind.
In moving forward, she said, Filipino lawmakers will take on the crucial role of enacting the Bangsamoro Basic Law, which the Bangsamoro Transition Commission is now drafting.
“President Aquino’s vision and compassion and his love and resolve for Mindanao have brought us to this new era of the Bangsamoro, where dreams of peace and prosperity may begin to overcome the nightmares of the past,” Deles said, as she praised both the peace panels and Malaysia through its facilitator Tengku Dato Abdul Ghafar, for the successful negotiations.
She also thanked MILF chieftain Murad Ebrahim and the rebel group’s central committee for their commitment to the peace process. “We thank MILF Chairman Murad (Ebrahim) and the members of the MILF Central Committee for the trust and commitment to see the negotiations and the subsequent implementation of the FAB to completion,” Deles said. “In a world looking for peaceful solutions to all troubles, we are grateful that we have found ours. Let us all seal it – and nurture it. The best is yet to come.”
Some Filipino lawmakers were also invited in Malaysia to witness the signing of the annex, but surprisingly, none of the governors on the Muslim autonomous region were invited for a still unknown reason.
Chief MILF peace negotiator Mohagher Iqbal said almost everybody back home smells impending success in the current peace talks, especially this 43rd round of negotiation. “They say the signing of the comprehensive peace agreement is just in the corner.
“They have diverse reasons to entertain such belief and I cannot blame them for it. In fact, I sympathize with them but not necessarily taking their view at face value. But truth is that anyone like me who has been part of the peace journey since the beginning will exactly wish and long for the day of reckoning to come soon,” Iqbal said.
“I ask everyone not to stay on the way of these dreamers. Many find solace in dreaming and, therefore, let them continue to dream of that final peace in Mindanao while we in the MILF and government continue to strive to overcome all those that stand on our way leading to the signing of the comprehensive peace agreement,” he added.
Peace negotiators have signed the Bangsamoro Framework Agreement and several annexes since 2012 and both sides expressed optimism that a political accord is near. But Iqbal cautioned that this early that the final destination of the journey of peace is not within immediate reach yet.
“We may be able to sign the comprehensive peace agreement soon as we wish, but that is not the end of the odyssey,” he said during the resumption of the peace talks in Malaysia, adding the exit agreement will formally terminate the peace negotiations if both sides complied with their part of the deal and after it is certified by Malaysia and the Third Party Monitoring Team. “Ideally that day of reckoning will come our way on or before 2016.” (Mindanao Examiner)