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The
truth, this time
By Noralyn Mustafa
Inquirer News Service
IN HIS report, titled "On the Question of Muslims in
Southern Philippines" (submitted to the 26th Islamic
Conference of Foreign Ministers, held at Ouagadougou, Burkina
Faso June 28-July 2, 1999), Organization of Islamic Conference
Secretary General Dr. Azeddine Laraki stated: "The MNLF
is on the verge of losing its credibility with its people
and Mujahideen freedom fighters because of the Government
of the Republic of the Philippines procrastination, prevarication
and filibuster tactics with regard to the implementation of
the peace agreement."
To this day -- with almost six years gone by -- the same
lament is repeated whenever there is a breakout of hostilities
between Moro armed groups and the Armed Forces of the Philippines.
The non-compliance by the government with the terms of the
GRP-MNLF Peace Agreement, which was signed on Sept. 2, 1996,
has also been the complaint of MNLF chairperson Nur Misuari
and his followers since that time, and the issue has surfaced
again in the wake of the recent gun battles between the so-called
Misuari MNLF faction and the government military.
The sporadic fighting, which has brought six battalions of
AFP soldiers, helicopter gunships and bomber planes to this
tiny island, has resulted in the death of over 35 servicemen
with 85 injured, an undetermined number of MNLF and Abu Sayyaf
killed, and close to 20,000 civilians evacuated.
And while both the Misuari camp and the AFP blame each other
as to who first pulled the trigger, with both sides determined
that there will be "no retreat, no surrender," guess
who's going to weep?
The damage to public and private property (especially schools)
has not been quantified so far. But surely unquantifiable
is the grief and the desperation, the trauma and the sense
of loss, the confusion that come with losing grip of a familiar,
normal existence and its supposedly secure moorings, like
going to school.
In the meantime, it is certainly worth our while to examine
Dr. Laraki's report and, maybe, with a minimum of discernment,
get to the bottom of an issue which, a preponderance of evidence
notwithstanding-as a detective would say-manages to evade
fact.
The report is actually an enumeration of the government's
sins of omission and betrayal of trust. The paper is also
significant in that it was submitted to the OIC in 1999. The
plebiscite to determine the area of autonomy was yet to be
held that year; this, according to the report, Misuari sought
to postpone, including the elections, insisting that he should
remain as governor of the ARMM until the "full implementation
of the peace agreement."
But the elections and plebiscite were held as mandated by
law, and on November 19, 2001, forces loyal to Misuari-refusing
to recognize the 15-man central committee formed in April
of that year-attacked the 104th army brigade headquarters.
As a result, 100 people were killed and Misuari was arrested.
He is now facing rebellion charges.
The report also includes capsule profiles of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front and the Abu Sayyaf. Though written six years
ago, it may yet provide us with some clues to the cause of
our present woes.
"The MILF," says the report, "is the second
most credible and important Muslim organization after the
MNLF...
"Incidents point to the fact that members and supporters
of the MILF are the target of government-led military operations.
Under such difficult circumstances, the MILF is taking the
necessary measures to reshuffle its military command for better
self-defense.
"The MILF's main claim is to set up an independent Islamic
state in the areas it controls.
"The Abu Sayyaf Group ranks third in terms of the number
of men and the strength. It is an independent Islamic group
fighting its way against government forces into recognition
of Muslim rights. The movement's leader Abdul Razzaq Janjalani
was killed December 18, 1998, in a clash with government forces.
But while the Abu Sayyaf Group is considered as an Islamic
movement whose goal is to recover Muslims's rights, the Government
of the Republic of the Philippines views it as an extremist,
terrorist movement."
A year later in April 2000, the Abu Sayyaf kidnapped 21 Europeans
and Malaysians in the island-diving resort of Sipadan, Malaysia.
In her latest pronouncement, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo sounded
like she was backed by solid facts when, citing military intelligence,
she implied that there was an alliance between the Misuari
MNLF forces and the Abu Sayyaf.
Charts were shown in TV newscasts, to illustrate the network
linking the MNLF, the ASG, the Jemaah Islamiyah and "renegade"
MILF to one another and to the series of bomb blasts that
killed and maimed scores of innocent people.
The distrust of Muslims is again at an all-time high. And
Muslim communities in Metro Manila increasingly fear of arbitrary
arrests and other forms of discrimination. This is the kind
of social divisiveness, heavy as it is with religious overtones,
that we need like a hole in the head in our present situation.
The military might have overrun camps of known MNLF and Abu
Sayyaf commanders. But those camps were mere structures; they
can be rebuilt. Nothing has been won except control of a piece
of territory.
It is time to face the greatest, most crucial battle of all-the
fight for truth.
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