World

Philippines postpones self-rule vote in restive Muslim region

Ex-MILF members say they need more time, polls to be held in 2025 instead

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 29 Oct 2021 6:30PM

Philippines postpones self-rule vote in restive Muslim region
Former MILF rebels have warned that the failure of the peace process would likely draw disillusioned Muslim youth in the region towards the more hard-line Islamists still waging an armed campaign in the southern Philippines. – Wikimedia Commons pic, October 29, 2021

MANILA – The Philippine government said today it will postpone elections key to ending decades of sectarian bloodshed in a troubled Muslim region, with the pandemic and a stalling peace process blamed for the delay.

The vote was a key provision in a 2014 peace agreement aimed at ending a conflict estimated to have claimed 150,000 lives and was due to take place next May in the Bangsamoro autonomous region in Muslim Mindanao.

But former rebels from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) group appointed to lead a transitional government have said they need more time before elections to a local legislature can go ahead and the vote will instead be held in 2025.

“President Rodrigo Roa Duterte signed... (the bill) yesterday resetting the elections in the Bangsamoro autonomous region in Muslim Mindanao to 2025,” his spokesman, Harry Roque, said.

The law grants Duterte the authority to appoint members of the 80-member transition authority whose terms would end with the 2025 election, Roque said.

Former MILF rebels have warned that the failure of the peace process would likely draw disillusioned Muslim youth in the region towards the more hard-line Islamists still waging an armed campaign in the southern Philippines.

But restrictions imposed because of the pandemic and the transitional government’s inability to draw up an election code had left them with little choice but to delay the poll, Georgi Engelbrecht, senior analyst for the Brussels-based peace monitor International Crisis Group, said last month.

“The extension is not the most perfect solution but, nonetheless, it’s a start,” he said.

A report by the monitor warned in April that the process of decommissioning the MILF’s 40,000 fighters was “sputtering”, with fewer than a third having laid down their weapons.

And, the Duterte government “has been slow to distribute to them the economic packages meant to entice them to cooperate”, it added.

Violence has also persisted despite the peace deal, with radical Islamic groups setting up shop in what remains the poorest part of the country.

In May 2017, hundreds of pro-Islamic State foreign and local gunmen seized Marawi, the country’s largest Muslim city.

The Philippine military wrested back the ruined city after a five-month battle that claimed more than 1,000 lives.

An insurgency first emerged in the mainly Catholic Asian nation in the early 1970s as a bid to set up a separate Muslim state in the Mindanao region, though the rebels later scaled down their goals to autonomy.

An earlier peace treaty between Manila and a rival Muslim rebel faction had created a self-ruled area in 1996, but it was hampered by a lack of funding and corruption while the MILF fought on.

The new entity is better funded and slightly larger. The national government retains police powers. – AFP, October 29, 2021

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