MANILA - Members of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF) are prepared to give up their weapons ''in exchange for
peace and the settlement of the centuries-old conflict in Mindanao.''
In an editorial posted by the MILF on
its website luwaran.com, the group said it is showing its sincerity in the
peace process by agreeing to the decommissioning of its firearms.
MILF members said decommissioning is
“a very emotional and sensitive issue” for them.
“The MILF is staking itself to the
scrutiny of time and history and the vicious attacks of critics to prove that
this is the right track to solve this question,” it said.
The MILF said the decommissioning of
firearms would be done in four phases.
The first phase is what the MILF described
as “goodwill” symbolic decommissioning of 75 firearms by yearend.
The second phase would involve the
decommissioning of 30 percent of its weapons upon the passage of the BBL in
Congress and upon its ratification in a plebiscite, the MILF said.
The BBL will implement the final
peace agreement signed by the government and the MILF last March. The measure
has been certified urgent by President Aquino and is expected to be discussed
by lawmakers when they resume session this month.
The MILF said another 35 percent of
the firearms would be decommissioned upon the establishment of the Bangsamoro
Police.
The remaining 30 percent of the MILF
weapons would be decommissioned two months before the signing of the Exit
Agreement provided that the peace panels, third party monitoring team and
facilitator certify that all commitments have been completed.
Under the normalization annex of the
Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro, the MILF will undertake a graduated
program for decommissioning of its forces so that they are put beyond use.
The decommissioning includes
activities that would ensure a smooth transition of the MILF forces towards a
productive life.
Critics believe MILF forces should
be required to surrender their firearms once the Bangsamoro region that will
replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) is formed. They pointed
out that it is hard to talk peace with an armed group.
The MILF said decommissioning is
“simply not surrender of firearms nor of their destruction.”
“They are not given or surrendered
to the government. It is not disarming the MILF per se, as some uninformed
media people would like to say,” the group said.
The MILF will continue to keep its
firearms even after the passage of the BBL.
“Most likely, the models in Northern
Ireland and Nepal will be followed whereby firearms turned over are put in
warehouses under the care and protection of third party decommissioning body
composed of international and domestic eminent persons,” it added.
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