Friday, October 28, 2016

Creation of new BTC, IP council to ensure inclusive peace process

From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): Creation of new BTC, IP council to ensure inclusive peace process

The creation of a reconstituted Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) and an advisory council for Indigenous People (IP), which would ensure a more inclusive and transparent peace process, is now underway.

In a statement, Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) Secretary Jesus Dureza said there is a need to involve other stakeholders in the peace process.

Ethnic groups and tribal leaders will form part of an advisory council that will serve as "voices of national minorities" in the peace negotiations with the communist rebels and the creation of a Bangsamoro enabling law.

Dureza said recommendations of ethnic minorities would be valuable in the implementation of signed peace agreements.

“[T]he IPs compose a very important sector in our work. I have already taken that with the President and he approved,” Dureza said.

“[T]his will be the first that we will be having what we will call the IP advisory council that will advise the panels -- panel that is handling the BTC, panels handling the CPP-NPA-NDF -they have inputs on what would happen,” he disclosed.

There, Dureza expalined IPs will have an opportunity to express their intention to join be included in the law so we will be creating an IP advisory council that will advise the PAPP and provide inputs to all the panels.

He also noted that an executive order on the reconstitution of a "more inclusive and more transparent" BTC is now awaiting the signature of the president.

“We are now re-crafting, reconstituting the Bangsamoro commission that will craft a new bill that hopefully Congress will also approve to replace the BBL (Bangsamoro Basic Law),” he said.

He said instead of 15 members in the BTC that will work again on a new, proposed bill in Congress, the MILF agreed to make it inclusive from 15 to 21.

"We have additional members from the MNLF, concerned stakeholders, IPs and more," he said.

The commission will be tasked to draft a new enabling law for the implementation of all signed Bangsamoro agreements including the 1996 Final Peace Agreement with the MNLF and the 2014 Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) with the MILF.

"These are people, stakeholders. They are not members of the CPP-NPA-NDF; they are not members of the Moro National Liberation Front; they are not members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front; but they are a part of the negotiations. They have a bigger table and they should have inputs in our work today,” Dureza said.

There is danger in continuing a "track of exclusivity and closed door negotiations" if such reforms are not pushed through, he added.

"We therefore have to gauge the public already so we are very transparent in our media, communications work, organizing several tables," he said.

The government has ongoing peace talks with the CPP-NPA-NDF (Communist Party of the Philippines/New People's Army/National Democratic Front) and the Bangsamoro.

The BTC was first convened in 2014 through Executive Order No. 120 which gives the body the mandate to: to draft the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law with provisions consistent with the 2012 Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro; and to recommend to Congress or the people proposed amendments to the 1987 Philippine Constitution whenever necessary.

Speaking on the envisioned new enabling law of the 2014 CAB in a press conference last July, Dureza maintained that its passage remained up to Congress.

The enabling law can be the pilot for the proposed federalism being espoused by the president, he said.

http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935488

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