Bangsamoro
independence
The Moro Islamic Liberation Front
trumpeted that in a recent survey that 44 percent of the
respondents voted for independence with only 18 percent
each for autonomy and federalism.
If so, why should this secessionist
front be averse to having a referendum in the proposed
additional areas to be included in the expanded
Bangsamoro Juridical Entity?
The mechanism of how the survey was
conducted is strange and the information on as to who
participated in the exercise is vague. The result at
best is fiction.
If this survey was open to the world
as everybody’s website is, there is no logical way of
sieving foreigners from Filipinos. We are all aware that
secessionist fronts are not an exclusive franchise of
the MILF. Because of the similarities of their
aspirations these fronts sympathize with each other. Add
to nations which openly or covertly support movements
and indigenous struggles for independence based mainly
on religious beliefs or plain act of terrorism. It is a
hodgepodge of ideologies out there willing to make
statements. Our own secessionist fronts and rebellion
are not immune from these intrusions.
The MILF therefore should not indulge
itself in the delusion that 44 percent of what they
perceived to be their constituency are for independence
from the Philippine Republic. While it is true that the
national government had been remiss in addressing the
problems and needs of Mindanao as a whole, there is no
excuse why a large segment of the proposed BJE and for
that matter the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao
remains in limbo. And we sympathize with them.
But against this inquiry is the
undeniable fact that since the creation of the ARMM the
region has a received substantial amount of money which
unfortunately went only to corruption. No less that the
present administration of ARMM has to purge the
bureaucracy because of the massive corruption.
If there are significant development
inroads these days we can attribute this only to the
success of the present national government
administration and partly to the administration of Fidel
Ramos. To her credit, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
successfully convinced and assembled donor countries to
help rebuild and construct new infrastructures, restore
and rehabilitate displaced families in areas of
conflict, provide an unprecedented aid to make Muslim
communities, either individually or collectively,
economically viable.
Had the MILF not been hedging in the peace talks,
there could have been more development assistance going
the way to the conflict areas and for that matter to the
BJE. Muslim pundits believe that more than in any given
time or era the present effort of concluding a stable
peace pact with the government is now. As they too
succinctly put it, independence from the Philippine
Republic is not a panacea to the Bangsamoro problems.
One scholar among them said that "if the government will
commit the mistake of granting them independence, the
next tragedy that will dawn on the Bangsamoro people is
the extermination of their clans and tribes." –
RINA DE JESUS, Cotabato City, rina_de_jesus@yahoo.com