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May 17, 2021 | 7:48 pm
The guns of 106 Moro Islamic Liberation Front combatants from Lanao del Sur are displayed during a decommissioning ceremony held February 18, 2020. The decommissioning and normalization process in the Bangasamoro region has been set back by the coronavirus pandemic. â BARMMGOVT
THE PALACE on Monday said President Rodrigo R. Duterte remains supportive of the peace pact between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), and the extension of the transition body that seeks to normalize the situation in the conflict-torn region of Bangsamoro in southern Philippines.
âHe continues to be supportive po of the initiative for the transition,â Presidential Spokesman Herminio âHarryâ L. Roque, Jr. told a televised news briefing on Monday.
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[Mark Navales/BenarNews]
A fragile peace in an autonomous Muslim region in the southern Philippines is at risk from armed groups which could sabotage the slow process toward normalization as economic momentum lags, an international conflict-monitoring group is warning.
The normalization process, which aims to bring a lasting peace to the Bangsamoro region after decades of war is behind schedule, with the coronavirus pandemic partly contributing to this, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group said in a report released Thursday.
“The peace process in the Bangsamoro, the majority-Muslim region of the southern Philippines, requires disarming some 40,000 Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) fighters and ensuring both their smooth integration into civilian life and peace dividends for communities where they live,” the report said.
Southern Philippines: Keeping Normalisation on Track in the Bangsamoro
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Peace in the Philippines’ majority-Muslim region requires disarming 40,000 ex-rebels and encouraging economic development where they live. But progress toward these goals, together called “normalisation”, is sputtering. Both Manila and the former insurgents need to hit the accelerator lest the process lose momentum entirely.
What’s new? Two years into a three-year transition, the “normalisation” process that aims to disarm ex-rebels and pay peace dividends to the Philippines’ Bangsamoro region is behind schedule, partly because of COVID-19. Manila has recently taken steps to restore the momentum, but time is of the essence.