President Duterte receives new BBL draft; calls for passage of bill for peace

President Rodrigo Duterte on Monday received the new draft of the Bangsamoro Basic Law on Monday, offering self-rule to the country’s Muslim minority for peace.

Duterte hopes the promise of autonomy will persuade Filipino Muslims to reject the Islamic State group, whose followers control parts of Marawi after nearly two months of fighting.

Duterte vowed to shepherd through Congress the bill jointly written and submitted to him by government officials and the country’s largest Muslim guerrilla group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

“This moment is a significant step forward in our quest to end centuries of hatred, mistrust and injustice that cost and affected the lives of millions of Filipinos,” he said in a speech to MILF leaders and government officials.

Irene Santiago (L), chair of the Philippine government’s implementing panel for the Bangsamoro peace accords, shakes hands with Moro Islamic Liberation Front  peace panel chairman Mohagher Iqbal after a signing ceremony of the GPH-MILF implementing panels joint communications plan at a hotel in Manila on July 17, ahead of the submission of the draft law of Bangsamoro Basic Law  to President Rodrigo Duterte.
/ AFP / Ted Aljibe

Both sides said that giving the  large and largely impoverished Islamic minority a better choice was crucial to heading off the lure of violent extremism.

“These misguided people have filled the vacuum created by our failure to enact the basic law, and feed into the frustration of our people,” MILF chairman Murad Ebrahim told the same gathering, referring to the Marawi gunmen.

Muslims since the 1970s had waged a decades-old insurgency that claimed more than 100,000 lives in the Mindanao region that includes Marawi.

The MILF signed a peace treaty with Duterte’s predecessor Benigno Aquino III in 2014 but Congress refused to pass the self-rule bill — a key provision of the accord–after the Mamasapano massacre that saw more than 40 members of the police’s elite force killed in a clash with Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters and members of the MILF.

Small rebel factions began pledging allegiance to the IS soon afterwards.

The Marawi attack on May 23 was their first major action, forcing Duterte to impose martial rule across Mindanao.

The chief government peace negotiator, Irene Santiago, said Manila expects the bill’s passage within a year.

“The next 12 months are full of opportunity but also fraught with so much danger. The dangers are staring us in the face: violent extremism, the source of the crisis in Marawi,” Santiago added.

An Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao has been in place in parts of the south since after a rival faction, the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), signed peace with Manila in 1996.

However it had failed to end violence and rebellion.

Santiago said both the MILF and MNLF helped to draft the new self-rule bill giving all sides optimism about its passage.

Duterte is also set to decide within the week whether to extend military rule over Mindanao.

The constitution limits martial rule to 60 days, a safeguard against reported abuses during martial law under the late Ferdinand Marcos.

However Congress can authorize an extension.

The military said there were 60-80 gunmen holed up in about 500 Marawi houses and buildings after weeks of day and night air strikes and artillery pounding.

About 300 civilians also remain trapped in the area and some of them have been taken hostage, the military said. Agence France Presse