The crux of the Moro problem
Every time armed hostilities flare up in
Mindanao, government assures the public that it is in control, the
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) claims it can wipe out the
troublemakers in due time, and a plethora of unsolicited solutions or
proposals by self-anointed Mindanao experts and watchers are offered.
It would appear at first blush that the hawks or militarists have the upper
hand what with de facto President, Mrs.
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’ s, (GMA) initial pugilistic stance after the
series of military setbacks in Basilan and Sulu that embarrassed not just
the military generals but also their Commander-in- Chief. This
confrontational approach had the potential to develop into an all-out
shooting war against the MILF in Basilan and then the MNLF in Sulu. But
perhaps cooler, or rather more pragmatic, heads anticipating the financial,
political and even diplomatic costs of such an outcome have prevailed.
So the seeming pull back,
at least in pronouncements, to the track of maintaining the formal ceasefire
with the MILF and the more uneasy one with the MNLF, pursuing so-called
rehabilitation and development projects in Muslim
Mindanao (many of
which are funded by the US) and resuming within the month peace talks with
the MILF, currently bogged down on the most contentious item, that of
ancestral domain. As to the “necessary” AFP/PNP actions in pursuit of the
ASG, GMA called for restraint in seeing to it that MILF and MNLF are not
provoked into another firefight that could widen the scope of and further
intensify armed hostilities.
Mrs. Arroyo also talked about giving back ancestral lands to the Moro people
in an attempt to defuse the situation by “showing sincerity”. But everyone,
no less the MILF and MNLF, knows that her words are worthless as a measure
of sincerity. On the contrary, a concrete proposal for “pilot project”
betrays tokenism and beams a clear signal and assurance to vested interests
– foreign and local – that they have nothing to fear.
There is a crying need
for a historical flashback on how the ancestral lands of the Bangsamoro were
forcibly taken from them. This took place with the foisting of first, US
colonial rule that presided over their dispossession, followed by the
governments of the Commonwealth and the Republic that carried out the same
injustice together with the marginalization of the Moros in their own
homeland, with the waves of relocation and settlement of non-Moro
communities. Thus with eighty percent of the Moros being landless tenants,
it is no wonder that their areas are among the most economically depressed
in the country today.
In a book entitled, "Bangsamoro, a Nation under Endless Tyranny" (1984,
updated 1999), Salah Jubair, a member of the MILF central committee, refers
to these laws as "legalized land grabbing."
According to Jubair,
after the signing of the Bates-Kiram Treaty on August 20, 1899, the US
colonial government applied the Land Registration Act (Act 496) in
Mindanao. It
required the registration in writing of all lands occupied by any person,
group or corporation. That mother act gave way to a host of "land grabbing
laws". Foremost of which were the following:
1. Public Act 718 (April
4, 1903), declaring as null and void all the lands granted by Moro sultans
and datus or non-Christian chiefs without state authority. This law
effectively dispossessed the Moros of their ancestral landholdings.
2. Public Act 926 (Oct.
7, 1903) declaring all lands registered under Act 496 as public lands,
making them available for homestead, sale or lease by individuals or
corporations.
3. Mining Act of 1905,
declaring all public lands free and open for exploration, occupation and
purchase even by US citizens.
4. Cadastral Act of 1907,
which facilitated land acquisition by "educated natives", money bureaucrats
and American speculators. "
Under the Commonwealth,
more inequitable laws were passed:
1. Act 4197 (Feb. 12, 1935), which declared land settlement as "the only
lasting solution" to the problem of Mindanao and Sulu. It "opened the
floodgates to the massive influx of settlers into Mindanao," who took over
the choicest parcels of land, especially along the highways, and began
cultivation even before the areas were subdivided.
2. Act 141 (Nov. 7, 1936)
which declared all Moro ancestral landholdings as public lands. Each Moro
was allowed to apply for no more than four hectares whereas a Christian
could own 24 hectares and a corporation, 1024 hectares. That led to foreign
firms hogging thousands of hectares as pineapple, banana and other crop
plantations.
3. Act 441 (June 1939),
creating the National Land Settlement Administration; it gave priority for
land settlement to those who had completed military training (in preparation
for the Japanese invasion).
After World War II,
settlements in Mindanao
were resumed under the Rice and Corn Production Administration and later the
Land Settlement and Development Corp, which resettled 1,500 families. Then,
under RA 1160 or the NARRA program, 20,500 families of former members of the
Hukbalahaps were resettled from 1954 to 1963.
In September 1971 the Department of Agrarian Reform, formed under RA 6389,
took over the settlement projects. By 1983 the DAR resettled 22,639 families
in 23 projects in Mindanao.
Sadly, says Jubair, under the 1987 Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program
(CARP) the Moros continued to be dispossessed of their remaining
landholdings.
Years of conflict despite
two “final” peace accords with the MNLF and ceasefire agreements with MILF
have forced the government to publicly acknowledge the roots of the Moro
problem but like previous regimes, GMA’s lacks the political will to solve
it by recognizing the right to self-determination, especially in the light
of decades-old national oppression and discrimination.
It is clear why the
Philippine government is not about to give up
Mindanao or even
only the acknowledged Moro ancestral domains to the Moro people. All talk
about national sovereignty and the indivisibility of Philippine territory is
just a convenient cover for the real reasons: ownership of land by big
non-Moro landowners, including multinationals such as Dole and Del Monte,
and access to the still untapped natural resources in
Mindanao, including
gold, copper and natural gas.
Further, the US "war on
terror" has brought to fore the importance of Mindanao as a strategic basing
area for the US military forces, being at the center of Southeast
Asia while having equal access to both the
Middle East and
Northeast Asia.
The GMA regime, like its
predecessors, will do all it can to deprive the Moro people of their
ancestral domain and genuine autonomy, even as GMA pays lip service to
these. After all, from where she sits, the de facto President claims she is
as strong as she wants to be. ###