Mission: Peace --- a Continuing Journey

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Mission: Peace --- a Continuing Journey MISSION: PEACE --- A CONTINUING JOURNEY There are symmetries in history that would sometimes appear to have been written by a disciplined, imaginative fictionist following a prefigured plot and a subtle, yet solid, narrative structure. Yet, we know of no one individual, or even one in concert with his cabal of plotters, that can ever predetermine the course – the arrows and arcs and end-of-acts – of a people’s storyline. SOURCE: thefilipinoservant.wordpress.com The EDSA People Power Revolution was one such historical symmetry in the Filipino people’s collective experience. It has become a moving piece of history with a powerfully mythic resonance. There is another one. In 1968, Senator Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. had exposed the infamous “Jabidah massacre”, and demanded justice for the mass murder in Corregidor of scores of hapless Muslim military trainees. Senator Benigno “Ninoy” S. Aquino, Jr. on September 13, 1972 delivers at the Senate session hall his privilege speech on “Oplan Sagittarius,” a top-secret military plan to place Metro Manila and outlying areas under the control of the Philippine Constabulary as a prelude to Martial Law. Earlier in 1968 in the same hall, Sen. Aquino exposed the Jabidah massacre which triggered a renewed armed separatist movement in Mindanao. (Photo source: Presidential Museum and Library) The incident sparked outrage not just among members of the Muslim community but also among all decent members of Philippine society. It is known to have triggered the formation of the Moro National Liberation Front led by University of the Philippines Professor Nurullaji “Nur” Misuari, who became its Chairman. Thus began an organized and sustained Moro insurgency. In February 1986, three years after another violent event that was the assassination of Senator Ninoy Aquino, his widow emerged as the first woman president of the country. President Corazon C. Aquino led a People Power revolt that ousted the dictatorship of then President Ferdinand E. Marcos. Barely seven months into her presidency, she took the bold initiative of meeting with Nur Misuari to talk peace. In the journal of Malacañang’s Presidential Management Staff (PMS), the following incident is recounted thus: “THE AIR WAS thick with tension. Maimbung, Sulu was full of fierce-looking men armed to the teeth. Government soldiers filled one half of the town, while Muslim secessionists controlled the other. It was September 1986, and the battle-weary town was expecting an unusual guest. For the first time in the history of the nation, its President was about to land in the heart of conflict. She was either insane or very fearless, indeed. “President Aquino broke protocol and personally met Nur Misuari, Chairman of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) on that day. The unprecedented move manifested the President's resolve to exhaust all peaceful means to achieve the peace which eluded Mindanao for so many years. It was a significant breakthrough, marking the first step in the peace process. In his eyeball-to-eyeball meeting with the President, Misuari agreed to cease hostilities and sit down with the government on how to arrive at a political solution. And as a further proof of government's sincerity, Misuari was allowed to hold consultations in Mindanao.” SOURCE: Presidential Museum and Library On September 5, 1986, President Corazon C. Aquino flew to Sulu to personally meet with Nur Misuari, Chairman of the MNLF. With the President were then Secretary of National Defense Juan Ponce Enrile, then AFP Chief of Staff General Fidel V. Ramos, Maj. Gen. Jose Magno, and Foreign Affairs Deputy Minister Mamintal Tamano. In the above photo, President Aquino is flanked by Nur Misuari and by his wife Desdemona. In August, 2009, President Corazon C. Aquino succumbed to colon cancer. The nation grieved on the loss of a beloved leader. Her passing inspired a clamor for her senator son, Benigno “Noynoy” S. Aquino III, to run for the presidency. With a clear reform agenda embodied in his Social Contract with the Filipino People, Noynoy Aquino was elected President in the first automated national elections of 10 May 2010. On August 4, 2011 he would also break protocol, just like his mother did 26 years earlier, to reinvigorate the peace dialogue between the Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). Reports MindaNews in its August 5, 2011 issue: “[GENERAL SANTOS CITY (MindaNews/05 August) – President Benigno Simeon Aquino III did what his mother did 25 years ago in pursuit of peace: meet with rebel leaders….Twenty five years later, her son, now also a President, traveled to Japan and met Thursday night with Al Haj Murad Ebrahim, chair of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, to fast-track the peace negotiations and ensure that implementation of whatever peace agreement may be forged, can be done within the remaining five years of his administration. SOURCE: Malacañang Photo Bureau/Jay Morales The President traveled with Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, who was the Presidential Security Group chief when his mother met with Nur Misuari; National Security Adviser Cesar Garcia, Budget Secretary Florencio Abad, Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima, Presidential Peace Adviser Teresita Quintos-Deles, Presidential Spokesperson Edwin Lacierda and Government Peace Panel Chair Marvic Leonen. The historic meeting with MILF Chairman Murad drew generally positive reactions from various sectors in Mindanao. Guiamel Alim, a member of the Council of Elders of the Consortioum of Bangsamoro Civil Society (CBCS) said the meeting is “the highest form of confidence-building in the peace process” that can “fast-track the talks to its final conclusion.” Former Presidential Peace Adviser Jesus Dureza said the meeting reminded him of what President Cory Aquino did in 1986: “For her son, President Noynoy to take a similar bold step for peace is also historic. From where I sit, I consider this meeting as an effort to fast track the peace process. We congratulate both the government and the MILF in taking the unconventional route just so an early settlement can be mutually forged,” he said.]” There is a bequeathing of the legacy of peace from his revered parents to President Benigno “Noynoy” S.Aquino III. In father, mother, and son the same light sparked their quest for peace. Today, a momentous public commitment to pursue a sustainable and enduring regime of peace based on common experience, common ground, shared humanity, and shared history takes place. The signing of the document, Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro, serves as a virtual bridge that would deliver the Filipinos toward the full fruition of their aspirations for a just and enduring peace in Mindanao. This framework agreement is our bridge and bequest of peace to present and future generations of Filipinos. Yet, as President Aquino said in his speech announcing the finalization of the agreement on October 7, 2012, challenges remain and the government is determined http://cache2.allpostersimages.com 1 to forge ahead to fulfill its mission of attaining long- term peace and stability in Mindanao: “The work does not end here. There are still details that both sides must hammer out. Promises must be kept, institutions must be fixed, and new capacities must be built nationally and regionally in order to effectively administer the Bangsamoro. The citizenry, especially the youth, must be empowered so that new leaders may emerge.” PEACE to one and all! Timeline of the Government of the Philippines (GPH) and MILF Peace Negotiations Prepared by the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) Even before the armed conflict in Mindanao, some Moro leaders in the past have already asserted their aspiration of not wanting to be part of the Philippines: 1924: Zambuangga Declaration - Letter of some Moro leaders to US Congress: proposed plebiscite be held 50 years after Philippine independence, for Moros to decide whether to be part of Philippines or be an independent state. 1935: Dansalan Declaration - Letter of some Moro leaders to US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt: “we do not want to be included in the Philippine independence.” 1961: Bill filed by Sulu Congressman Ombra Amilbangsa seeking to grant and recognize the independence of the province of Sulu. Following is a chronology of the armed conflict in Mindanao and peace negotiations that were conducted that sought to end the conflict: March: The Jabidah Massacre- Sen. Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino made an 1968 expose’ about the massacre of at least 28 Muslim army recruits (called the Jabidah commandos) who were secretly undergoing commando training at Corregidor Island. According to accounts, the training was part of a plot by President Marcos to infiltrate Sabah, agitate the people there to turn against their government, and demand annexation to the Philippines. When the trainees refused, they were summarily shot. May 1: The MIndanao Independence Movement (MIM) - Amidst the backdrop of crystallizing Muslim discontent due to the Jabidah massacre, former governor of the empire province of (undivided) Cotabato, Datu Udtog Matalam spearheaded the issuance of a manifesto under the MIM banner declaring independence from the Republic of the Philippines. The Ilaga movement - In response to the threatening declarations of 1969 the MIM, as well as its rumored secret military camps, and to protect their election bids in 1971, certain diehard anti-Muslim politicians (known as the Magic 7) in the Central Mindanao area came together in September to formally organize the Ilaga movement. The “Mindanao Crisis” - Violent conflicts erupted among Muslim and 1971 Christian civilians, and among politicians. This was highlighted by several massacres such as the Manili massacre in Carmen, Cotabato and the Tacub massacre in Kauswagan, Lanao del Norte. Establishment of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founded 1972 by then U.P. Professor Nur Misuari, seeking to establish an independent "Bangsamoro Republik." The 1976 Tripoli Agreement - provided the framework for the creation 1976 of an autonomous region in Southern Philippines; identified 13 provinces and 9 cities as areas of autonomy in Southern Philippines, subject to Philippine Constitutional processes.
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