Posted to the Mindanao Examiner blog site (Mar 25): We will, We shall, Sign the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro: Prof. Miriam Coronel Ferrer
ON MARCH 27, we will, we shall, sign the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro. There is no turning back. Only moving decisively forward. The peace train is on track. Its design is complete. Most of its elements are in place. Although it had a slow start, it eventually picked up speed.
In the last 18 months from the historic signing of the FAB on October 15, 2012, we have produced: four Annexes, one Addendum, five Terms of Reference for our five mechanisms (TPMT, ICP, IDB, TJRC, JNC), renewed our TORs for the IMT and AHJAG. And now the CAB.
What we will sign: the short 5-page, 12 point text that will formalize the CAB. What the CAB is: puts together all signed agreements – FAB, Annexes and addendum, also the very first, very important Ceasefire Agreement of 1997, Agreement on Peace signed in 2001 in Tripoli which laid down the agenda for the talks, the Declaration of Continuity of Negotiations in June 2010 which picked up the pieces from the failed MOA-AD of 2008.
The CAB text to be signed: Reiterates the principles of the negotiation, namely: recognition of the justness and legitimacy of the cause of the Bangsamoro people, their aspiration for meaningful autonomy through a democratic process; aim of finding a solution to the Bangsamoro Question with honor, justice and dignity; aim to end the fighting between the government and the MILD and promote peace and stability; recognition of the responsibilities of the Parties to protect and enhance the rights of the Bangsamoro people and all other inhabitants, correct historical injustice, and equitably diffuse wealth and political power.
Reiterates commitment to all signed documents. Thanks all those who played important roles in the process. Provides the principles: Mutual respect for the right to one’s identity, continue with dialogues and consultations, leading to the establishment of a BM government that will protect individual and collective rights, and be truly democratic, accountable and representative of the diversity of its populace, and for the parties to abide by the modalities and mechanisms provided, and most important, to ensure the integrity of the whole process.
The whole negotiating panels of the GPH and the MILF will sign the document. On GPH end, the signatories would be: myself; panel members Senen Bacani, Yasmin Busran-Lao, Mehol Sadain; panel consultants Zenonida Brosas and Jose Luis Martin Gascon.
On the MILF end, the signatories would be: Mohager Iqbal, Datu Michael Mastura, Maulana “Bobby” Alonto, Abhoud Syed Lingga, Abdulla Camlian and Datu Antonio Kinoc.
The Malaysian Facilitator, Tengku Dato’ Abdul Ghafar Tengku Mohamed will also sign as witness. The signing will be done in the presence of Teresita Quintos-Deles, Al Haj Murad Ebrahim, President Benigno Simeon Aquino III and the Dato Sri Mohd Najib Bin Tun Hj Abdul Razak.
It will be done in the presence of more than 1,000 people before the Palace grounds. The sealing of the comprehensive agreement is important not only for the Bangsamoro, the people of Mindanao and all other Filipino citizens who have all to gain as one country pursuing its unfinished task of nation-building.
It is also our global contribution to the pursuit of peace in our immediate neighborhood, the Southeast Asia region, and the rest of the world. The last momentous agreement of this kind was those sealed in Aceh, Indonesia between the Republic of Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement in 2005.
Many other countries continue to face similar troubles. Our experience, our mechanisms, our approaches have become a rich source of inspiration to these countries that remain challenged by their respective domestic conflicts.
Moreover, our document would be unique in that it would be the first such agreement to be signed by a woman, not only as one of two chief signatories to a comprehensive agreement, but also because not only one but a total of three women – one half of the 6-person negotiating team of the GPH, and about one-fourth of the total number of signatories – would be signing it. Happy women’s month to everyone.
The point, however, is not simply because you have women in Track 1, but that this agreement is also a partnership in many ways: a partnership between the Bangsamoro and the Philippine government, between and among peoples of different faiths and ethnicity, and between men and women. And together, we can make it all happen. Together, we can make peace, not war.
That said, the historic signing is but a short station stop in this difficult but rewarding journey to build peace, development and meaningful autonomy for the Bangsamoro and the other people in the parts of Mindanao that will fall under the autonomous government. We cannot rest, we shall be moving on, full speed ahead, towards full implementation.
http://www.mindanaoexaminer.net/2014/03/we-will-we-shall-sign-comprehensive.html
ON MARCH 27, we will, we shall, sign the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro. There is no turning back. Only moving decisively forward. The peace train is on track. Its design is complete. Most of its elements are in place. Although it had a slow start, it eventually picked up speed.
In the last 18 months from the historic signing of the FAB on October 15, 2012, we have produced: four Annexes, one Addendum, five Terms of Reference for our five mechanisms (TPMT, ICP, IDB, TJRC, JNC), renewed our TORs for the IMT and AHJAG. And now the CAB.
What we will sign: the short 5-page, 12 point text that will formalize the CAB. What the CAB is: puts together all signed agreements – FAB, Annexes and addendum, also the very first, very important Ceasefire Agreement of 1997, Agreement on Peace signed in 2001 in Tripoli which laid down the agenda for the talks, the Declaration of Continuity of Negotiations in June 2010 which picked up the pieces from the failed MOA-AD of 2008.
The CAB text to be signed: Reiterates the principles of the negotiation, namely: recognition of the justness and legitimacy of the cause of the Bangsamoro people, their aspiration for meaningful autonomy through a democratic process; aim of finding a solution to the Bangsamoro Question with honor, justice and dignity; aim to end the fighting between the government and the MILD and promote peace and stability; recognition of the responsibilities of the Parties to protect and enhance the rights of the Bangsamoro people and all other inhabitants, correct historical injustice, and equitably diffuse wealth and political power.
Reiterates commitment to all signed documents. Thanks all those who played important roles in the process. Provides the principles: Mutual respect for the right to one’s identity, continue with dialogues and consultations, leading to the establishment of a BM government that will protect individual and collective rights, and be truly democratic, accountable and representative of the diversity of its populace, and for the parties to abide by the modalities and mechanisms provided, and most important, to ensure the integrity of the whole process.
The whole negotiating panels of the GPH and the MILF will sign the document. On GPH end, the signatories would be: myself; panel members Senen Bacani, Yasmin Busran-Lao, Mehol Sadain; panel consultants Zenonida Brosas and Jose Luis Martin Gascon.
On the MILF end, the signatories would be: Mohager Iqbal, Datu Michael Mastura, Maulana “Bobby” Alonto, Abhoud Syed Lingga, Abdulla Camlian and Datu Antonio Kinoc.
The Malaysian Facilitator, Tengku Dato’ Abdul Ghafar Tengku Mohamed will also sign as witness. The signing will be done in the presence of Teresita Quintos-Deles, Al Haj Murad Ebrahim, President Benigno Simeon Aquino III and the Dato Sri Mohd Najib Bin Tun Hj Abdul Razak.
It will be done in the presence of more than 1,000 people before the Palace grounds. The sealing of the comprehensive agreement is important not only for the Bangsamoro, the people of Mindanao and all other Filipino citizens who have all to gain as one country pursuing its unfinished task of nation-building.
It is also our global contribution to the pursuit of peace in our immediate neighborhood, the Southeast Asia region, and the rest of the world. The last momentous agreement of this kind was those sealed in Aceh, Indonesia between the Republic of Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement in 2005.
Many other countries continue to face similar troubles. Our experience, our mechanisms, our approaches have become a rich source of inspiration to these countries that remain challenged by their respective domestic conflicts.
Moreover, our document would be unique in that it would be the first such agreement to be signed by a woman, not only as one of two chief signatories to a comprehensive agreement, but also because not only one but a total of three women – one half of the 6-person negotiating team of the GPH, and about one-fourth of the total number of signatories – would be signing it. Happy women’s month to everyone.
The point, however, is not simply because you have women in Track 1, but that this agreement is also a partnership in many ways: a partnership between the Bangsamoro and the Philippine government, between and among peoples of different faiths and ethnicity, and between men and women. And together, we can make it all happen. Together, we can make peace, not war.
That said, the historic signing is but a short station stop in this difficult but rewarding journey to build peace, development and meaningful autonomy for the Bangsamoro and the other people in the parts of Mindanao that will fall under the autonomous government. We cannot rest, we shall be moving on, full speed ahead, towards full implementation.
http://www.mindanaoexaminer.net/2014/03/we-will-we-shall-sign-comprehensive.html