You are on page 1of 9

Decommissioning of 12,000 MILF

combatants starts Sept. 7


By
 CAROLYN O. ARGUILLAS
 -
AUGUST 15, 2019 11:57 PM

DAVAO CITY (MindaNews / 15 August) – The decommissioning of 12,000


members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front’s (MILF) armed wing will be from
September 2019 to March 2020, with around 1,100 combatants and 900 weapons
decommissioned on September 7 in ceremonies that will be attended by President
Rodrigo Duterte, Presidential Peace Adviser Carlito Galvez said.

Galvez told the conference on “Walking and Working Together for Healing and
Reconciliation” at the Ateneo de Davao University last Wednesday that the 12,000
represents 30% of the 40,000 members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces
(BIAF) that will be decommissioned under Phase 2 of the four-phase process.

ad
The September 7 decommissioning will be in the same venue where Phase 1 was
held four years ago, at the gymnasium of the old provincial capitol in Simuay,
Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao,

Under Phase 1, 20 crew-served weapons and 55 high-powered firearms were


turned over to the Independent Decommissioning Body (IDB) on June 16, 2015
and 145 BIAF members were also decommissioned that day in ceremonies
witnessed by then President Benigno Simeon Aquino III. 
Presidential Adviser on Peace, Reconciliation and Unity announced at the conference on
“Walking and Working Together for Healing and Reconciliation” on 14 August 2019 at the
Ateneo de Davao University that decommissionin of 12,000 combatants of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front will begin on September 7, 2019 in ceremonies to be attended by Preisdent
Rodrigo Duterte. Photo courtesy of OPAPP
The Annex on Normalization of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB), the
peace agreement between government and the MILF signed in March 2014, provides under
Phase 2 that 30% of the forces and weapons would be decommissioned when the Bangsamoro
law is ratified.

ad
The Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao or Repbulic
Act 11054 was ratified during a plebiscite on January 21 this year.
The Commission on Elections on January 25, 2019 proclaimed RA 11054 ratified by majority of
the people in the proposed core territory of the new autonomous political entity touted to be the
“last chance” for peace in the decades old struggle of the Bangsamoro people to establish a
government of the Moro, by the Moro and for the Moro, inclusive of the non-Moro settlers and
Indigenous Peoples as provided by the law.

Galvez told MindaNews on Thursday that the decommissioning of the 12,000, representing 30%
of the 40,000 BIAF members, would be until March 2020.

He said there will be eight decommissioning sites “and we expect to finish (processing) our
12,000 combatants from September (2019) to March (2020).”

“Our benchmark is that we can decommission more or less 200 per day per site in series, not
simultaneous,” he added.

On September 7, a total of 1,060 BIAF members and 920 firearms will be decommissioned. Also
to be formally decommissioned are 225 BIAF members who are undergoing training as members
of the Joint Peace and Security Teams (JPST).

Galvez told the conference that the 225 will be “makakasama ng police, ng armed forces sa
paghanap ng terrorists at the same time sila po security during decommissioning” (will join the
police and armed forces in the search for terrorists and at the same time they will provide
security during the decommissioning).

The trainees’ basic military training started August 1 and will end on August 26.

ad
Already listed for decommissioning on September 7 are 1,060 BIAF members plus 225 already
training under the JPST or 1,285, and 920 firearms.
Galvez told the conference that decommissioned combatants and their families “will be assisted
in making the transition to becoming peaceful and productive civilians” and the rifles they have
been carrying for years would be replaced by ploughshares, fishnets and other implements to
earn sustainable incomes.

Reckoning 30%

On January 18 this year, after the Peace Assembly where President Rodrigo Duterte campaigned
for a “yes” vote to ratify RA 11054, MILF chair Al Haj Murad Ebrahim told MindaNews they
had “30,000 to 40,000” regular members of the BIAF that “will be subject for
decommissioning.” He said they were “not necessarily all armed but all are under the official
roster of the BIAF.”

Moro Islamic Liberation Front combatants in a military formation at Camp Darapanan in Sultan
Kudarat town, Maguindanao. MILF fighters will be decommissioned in line with the
Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro, the final peace deal between the government
and the MILF signed in 2014. MindaNews file photo by BONG S. SARMIENTO
Murad said the MILF-owned weapons were only 6,000 to 7,000 and they were reckoning the
30% to be decommissioned after the ratification from this number. Thirty per cent of “6,000 to
7,000” is 1,800 to 2,100 weapons.

Ads by optAd360

Ebrahim explained their three categories: 6,000 to 7,000 weapons owned by the MILF itself; but
there are other weapons owned by individual members and they were conducting a survey on it;
and weapons of sympathizers.

Four phases

Phase 1 of the Normalization process is “from the signing of the Annex on Normalization up to
the completion of the verification and validation conducted by the IDB.”

The Annex was signed on January 25, 2014.

Phase 1 included the ceremonial turn over of 20 crew-served weapons and 55 high-powered
firearms in June 2015. Phase 1 also included starting the process of redeployment of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines (AFP) from former conflict areas and the submission of the report of
the Independent Commission on Policing, among others.
DECOMMISSIONED. President Aquino with Ambassador Haydar Berk of Turkey, chair of the
Independent Decommissioning Body, pass by the area of processing for the decommissioning of
145 combatants of the MILF, inside the gymnasium of the old Maguindanoa provincial captiol in
Simuay, Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao on Tuesday, June 16, 2015. MindaNews photo by
CAROLYN O. ARGUILLAS
It should also have established the National Agency Task Force for the Disbandment of the
PAGs (private armed groups) and Transitional Justice and Reconciliation Commission. These
two bodies are still in the process of setting up.

ad
Phase 2 is “from the completion of validation of MILF forces up to the ratification of the
Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL)” which will then involve the decommissioning of 30% of MILF
forces and weapons; Phase 3 is “from the ratification of (RA 11054) up to the establishment and
operationalization of the police force for the Bangsamoro,” which will lead to the
decommissioning of 35% more of MILF forces and weapons or a total of 65% by then.

Phase 4 is “from the operationalization of the police force for the Bangsamoro up to two months
prior to the signing of the Exit Agreement, provided that the evaluation of the panels with the
participation of the Third Party Monitoring Team and Facilitator that all the commitments of the
parties, except the remaining stage of decommissioning, has been completed.”

The fourth and last phase involves the decommissioning of the remaining MILF forces and
weapons or a total of 100% by then.

It is not clear how Phase 4 will be implemented given that the regional police force earlier
envisioned in the peace agreement has not been carried into the Bangsamoro law.

Redeployment of AFP

Normalization under the peace agreement does not involve only the decommissioning of the
MILF but also the redeployment of the Armed Forces of the Philippines from the conflict areas.

In Phase 1, the Joint Normalization Committee recommends criteria for AFP redeployment, with
the Joint Peace and Security Committee (JPSC) and Joint Peace and Security Teams (JPST)
initiating work on disbandment of PAGs.

ad
Phase 2, which ends with the ratification of (RA 11054) marks the start of the implementation of
AFP redeployment; deactivation of the S/CAAs or the Special Civilian Armed Forces
Geographical Unit; actions against PAGs; firearms control and management.

Phase 3 continues with the implementation of AFP redeployment; continuing actions against
PAGs; firearms control and management while Phase 4 involves continuing redeployment;
continuing actions against PAGs; firearms control and management. (Carolyn O. Arguillas /
MindaNews)
https://www.mindanews.com/peace-process/2019/08/decommissioning-of-12000-milf-combatants-
starts-sept-7/

https://reliefweb.int/report/philippines/phase-ii-decommissioning-milf-biaf-combatants-weapons-
resumes

You might also like