Posts Tagged ‘MILF’

MILF awaits tack of Aquino in Mindanao peace efforts

Monday, May 24th, 2010

MANILA, Philippines - The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) will be watching how the new administration of incoming President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III will pursue the peace process in Mindanao, the Muslim separatist group said.

The MILF is the country’s largest Muslim separatist rebel group pushing for the establishment of an Islamic state in large parts of Mindanao.

Mohagher Iqbal, chief negotiator of the MILF, said the next stage of the protracted peace talks will depend on how the Aquino administration intends to deal with the issue.

“The peace process depends on them, whether they want to talk or whether they will adopt the war policy. If they adopt the war policy, we will defend ourselves,” said Iqbal.

Previously, Iqbal expressed doubts about a peace pact with the new administration, citing that Aquino is surrounded by people who are “spoilers” of the peace process, including vice-presidential running mate Manuel “Mar Roxas II, and former North Cotabato vice governor and losing gubernatorial candidate Manny Piñol.

“Piñol is no longer in position, but Roxas is still influential. Ultimately, what will matter here is the interest of big businessmen, warlords and mining companies,” he said.

Roxas and Piñol both strongly opposed the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD), which would have been a major breakthrough in the peace talks with the MILF.

Iqbal said it is normal for a revolutionary group like the MILF to wage its cause through war, but the negotiation track is a better option.

“In war, we cannot win over the government, we also cannot be beaten by the government. It is very destructive to both sides, so it is better if we go for a negotiation track. I hope that negotiations do not take forever, there should be an effort to accelerate the peace process and finally resolve this,” he said. 

While the MILF claims it has the arsenal to sustain an all-out war against the Philippine armed forces, the group, for now, prefers to wait for the next step that will be taken by the Aquino administration.

“We have already proven that we can sustain war, we can resort to highly mobile tactics which will be difficult for the government if a confrontation ensues. We can dictate the terms of the war, when we will attack, where we will attack, and what arms to use,” Iqbal said.

The Philippine military estimates the MILF forces to number around 12,000, but Iqbal, refused to confirmed this.

Last week, the European Union Ambassador to the Philippines Alistair MacDonald said the EU has agreed to participate in the International Monitoring Team (IMT) assisting the peace process in Mindanao.

MacDonald said the details of EU’s participation will be firmed up as soon as the terms of reference have been agreed with the parties in the peace talks.

The IMT, with peace talks broker Malaysia as head of the team, was initially deployed in 2004. It later added Japanese economic experts as part of the team.

Irish priest, 79, freed after being held for month in Philippines

Friday, November 13th, 2009

A 79-year old Irish priest who was held in the Philippines for a month by a band of Islamic rebels spoke hours after his release of the kindness of his captors and his determination to continue his missionary work. Father Michael Sinnott, who had a quadruple heart bypass four years ago, was forced to climb up mountains and through swampy jungle, for 32 days before being freed yesterday.

“I am a bit old and I found hiking a bit difficult at times,” Father Sinnott said in Manila, where he was flown to meet the country’s president, Gloria Arroyo. “I think that they’d be glad to kidnap a younger man next time … I would like to thank everyone who helped to get me free and all my friends who prayed for me while I was in captivity.”

He was handed over to the Philippines army by representatives of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), a rebel army that has been fighting a long-running guerrilla war for independence for the Philippines southern island of Mindanao. The MILF insisted that it had not kidnapped Father Sinnott, but negotiated his release from the original kidnappers — a rebel splinter group, or “lost command”.

Read more>>

Puno: MILF behind kidnap of Sinnott

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Moro rebs deny they are holding Irish priest

MANILA, Philippines—Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno Tuesday claimed that members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) were behind the abduction of Fr. Michael Sinnott, thus slamming the door on the separatist group’s offer to help free the Irish missionary.

“It is clear to us that the kidnappers are either directly connected to or very closely associated with the MILF,” Puno said at a news briefing in Camp Crame national police headquarters.

Asked to elaborate, he said: “In the process of the case buildup, the identities of the kidnappers started to surface and a great majority of them are actually identified as members of the MILF 113th Base Command.”

Read more>>

Gov’t offensive vs Abus to continue during Ramadan

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro said Tuesday that military operations against the Abu Sayyaf bandit group will continue even during the holy month of Ramadan, which starts this week.

Teodoro reiterated that the government’s declaration for the suspension of military operations is only for the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), adding that lawless groups like the Abu Sayyaf are not entitled to a SOMO.

Meanwhile, the defense chief stood by the military’s claim that the MILF aided Abu Sayyaf bandits during the day-long clashes in Tipo-Tipo town, Basilan province last Wednesday.

The military said the military’s death toll reached 23 because of the MILF’s ambush against Marine troops in Barangay Baguindan.

Read more…

MILF consultations on peace process start

Monday, August 10th, 2009

The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) has started conducting consultations on the peace process in Mindanao to update its followers regarding the possible resumption of peace negotiations with the government.

MILF political committees under political affairs chairman Ghazali Jaafar started the consultations August 1 and will last until August 12.

“The purpose of this meeting is to provide updates on the recent developments on the peace processes between the government and MILF, particularly on the four issues reached by the government and MILF during the special meeting of the two parties’ peace negotiating panels in Malaysia last July 28-29, 2009,” the MILF said on its Website.

Read more…

5 days before SONA, Arroyo halts offensives vs MILF rebs

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Five days before her last State of the Nation Address (SONA), President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ordered the Armed Forces of the Philippines Thursday to stop its offensives against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front rebels in a bid to restart peace talks, a move welcomed by the guerrillas.

Talks with the MILF broke down last year, when the government accused the rebels of launching attacks on several villages in Mindanao after the Supreme Court threw out a preliminary peace deal.

Chief government negotiator Rafael Seguis said Mrs. Arroyo’s order is aimed at providing a conducive atmosphere for the resumption of talks.

Read more…

5 kidnap victims rescued in Lanao del Sur - AFP

Monday, July 20th, 2009

MANILA, Philippines - Five victims of a kidnapping incident blamed on Moro rebels in Lanao del Sur had been rescued by government security forces last Saturday, a military official said on Sunday.

Armed Forces chief public information officer Lt. Col. Romeo Brawner Jr. identified the five as Eudillo Padilla, Rene Morteza, Felipe Lanuza, Vicky Lanuza and Jerald Cabanig, all employees of Vicmar Logging Concession.

The five were abducted last Wednesday at Barangay Panoruganan in Kapai town by eight “rogue” members of the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). Brawner said the group was led by one Basit Kauyag.

Read more…

MILF brushes aside calls to resume peace talks

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

MANILA, Philippines - On the eve of a “peace power day” in Mindanao, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) Tuesday brushed aside calls for it to resume peace talks with the government.

MILF deputy spokesman Khaled Musa said that while resuming the talks is easy, it is hard to solve the peace problem because of the Arroyo administration’s “fooling around” policy.

“As long as men like Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita and (Interior) Secretary Ronaldo Puno are still part of the government that directs the peace process, nothing can be expected from the exercises,” Musa said in an article on the MILF Web site.

Read more..

4 hurt in Cotabato City blast; MILF blamed

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

KIDAPAWAN, Philippines - Four women were injured when an improvised explosive device (IED) went off outside a Bingo gaming center along a busy street in Cotabato City in the southern Philippines at around 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, the military said.

The area is just a block away from a branch of fast-food chain Jollibee and few meters away from Agong Lodging House where another IED exploded on Tuesday night, injuring the inn’s manager and his assistant.

Read more..

MILF: Kidnappers demanding $10M

Monday, February 9th, 2009

THE Moro Islamic Liberation Front yesterday said it has received information that kidnappers of the three delegates of the International Committee of the Red Cross are demanding $10 million in ransom.

“MILF men inside Sulu, tasked to monitor the situation on the ground regarding the ICRC hostage-taking, are still validating the report,” said the MILF in its website.

The MILF also noted reports of a $5 million ransom for the release of Italian Eugenio Vagni, Swiss Andreas Notter and Filipino Mary Jean Lacaba who were abducted January 15 after visiting an ICRC water project at the Sulu provincial jail.

Read Full Story