Google – AFP, 8 December 2013
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A combat
police force sniper gets into position to confront Moro National
Liberation
Front rebels in downtown Zamboanga City in the Philippines on
September 9, 2013
(AFP/File)
|
Manila —
The Philippine government and Muslim rebels on Sunday signed a crucial power
sharing accord, paving the way for a final peace agreement aimed at ending a
decades-long insurgency that has killed tens of thousands.
The power
sharing annex had been considered highly contentious, with Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF) rebels seeking greater authority over a proposed
autonomous region in the south which will cover Muslim-dominated regions of
this mainly-Catholic archipelago of 100 million.
The accord,
signed by negotiators from the government and MILF representatives in Kuala
Lumpur, is yet another step towards finally ending the bloody insurgency in the
southern Philippines.
A joint
statement said both sides had signed "the agreement on the delineation and
sharing of power between the central government and the Bangsamoro (Filipino
Muslim) Government" within the projected autonomous area.
The
statement added that both parties were now "confident" that they
could soon sign the last remaining annex on normalisation and complete the
comprehensive peace agreement by January 2014.
"The
signing of the Annex on Power Sharing ensures the achievement of a genuine and
viable autonomy for the Bangsamoro," Teresita Deles, the head of the
government peace panel, said in a statement.
"It
has been a very difficult round but we were able to overcome a lot of
obstacles."
President
Benigno Aquino congratulated both parties on the annex, his spokesman Herminio
Coloma said.
Copies of
the agreement, released late Sunday, outline the powers that will be reserved
by the national government, those that will held by the government of the
autonomous area and those that will be shared by both.
The accord
also sets the parameters of the "Bangsamoro assembly" that will
govern the autonomous area while ensuring that tribal groups, Christian
settlers and women are represented.
While
foreign policy, defence, monetary policy, immigration and global trade will
remain under the control of national government, the Bangsamoro government will
have powers over agriculture, employment, urban development, public works and
environmental protection, the agreement said.
In an
interview with ABS-CBN television, Deles described the move to power-sharing as
"the heart of the entire peace accord."
The two
sides in October last year had signed an initial pact on ending the conflict
that has claimed an estimated 150,000 lives, in preparation for a final
agreement.
Under the
plan, the 12,000-strong MILF would give up its quest for an independent
homeland in the southern island of Mindanao in return for significant power and
wealth-sharing in a new autonomous region there.
Lingering
obstacles
The
newly-signed power sharing annex had been one of four preliminary accords that
had to be completed before a final peace deal could be signed.
Two other
annexes on transitional arrangements and sharing of revenues had already been
signed earlier this year while a fourth annex, on normalisation, including the
possible disarming of MILF guerrillas, is still being discussed.
The
normalisation annex may also prove difficult as the rebels will likely be
reluctant to lay down their arms.
MILF
negotiator Mohagher Iqbal was quoted by ABS-CBN as saying that the next round
of talks would also be difficult and that both sides should not be complacent.
Even after
the treaty is signed, the Philippine parliament would still need to pass a
"basic law" for the Muslim self-rule area, and people in the planned
autonomous region would need to ratify it via a regional plebiscite.
However President
Aquino in October had expressed confidence that the insurgency could be settled
before he steps down in 2016.
Completing
the agreement during Aquino's term is considered vital as there is no guarantee
his successor would have the political strength or enthusiasm to push ahead
with the peace process.
Muslim
rebels have been fighting since the 1970s for an autonomous or independent
homeland in the southern Philippines in a conflict that has left the
resource-rich region mired in poverty and instability.
Other
Muslim armed groups have violently opposed the MILF's moves towards peace.
Followers
of Nur Misuari, founder of the older Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF),
from which the MILF sprang, besieged the southern Philippine city of Zamboanga
in September, sparking three weeks of fighting which left over 200 people dead.
Misuari
allegedly ordered the assault, fearing a peace accord with the MILF would leave
him sidelined.
The
Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, a guerilla group that splintered from the
MILF, has also tried to derail the peace process, launching bloody attacks
against government forces in the south.


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