Peace and Development
Peace and Development
Peace and Development
December 2020
Naoyuki Ochiai
2020
The author would like to thank Drs. Robert D. Eldridge and Graham B.
Leonard for their translation of this work.
The views and opinions expressed in the articles contained in this volune do
not necessarily represent the official view or positions of the organizations the
authors work for or are affiliated with.
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to anti-government forces as well. When “anti-government forces” is
written, it is easy to imagine violent, terrorist groups, or other extremists.
It goes without saying that JICA does not approve whatsoever of any
violent acts, but at the same time, it would be naïve to suggest that such
entities were mixed in. With that said, from the perspective of the anti-
government forces, it was a fight for justice, autonomy, and the protection
of their rights with ancestral domains, etc. Through the development
of conflict-affected Mindanao, the Government of Japan and JICA were
able to provide a place by which the anti-government forces and the
Philippine government could work together harmoniously toward peace.
This careful approach toward supporting the area and bringing about
long-lasting peace is the real charm of aid and development work.
Akio Takahara
Director, JICA Ogata Sadako Research Institute
for Peace and Development
ii
Section 2 The History of the Mindanao Conflict
These events provide the backdrop for the founding of the Moro Na-
tional Liberation Front (MNLF) in 1971 by Nur Misuari, a lecturer at the
University of the Philippines, and his two associates Abul Khayr Alonto
and Salamat Hashim. The MNLF was an armed group that sought the
independence of the Bangsamoro (the Moro people).
The MNLF was the first group to adopt the phrase and concept of the
“Moro people.” But why did they use the term “Moro,” a slur against
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Chapter 1
Muslims that dated from the Spanish colonial period? Muslims in the
southern Philippines can be broadly divided – both linguistically and
geographically – between Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago. They can
be then further subdivided into groups like the Maguindanao, Maranao,
Tausug, Yakan, Sama, and Bajau. They were in other words, not a group
that possessed a sense of ethnic solidarity. The MNLF defined “Moros”
as those who embraced the MNLF’s national concept and lived in the
territory that their independent state would have sovereignty over. They
then used this term to create a sense of ethnic solidarity that could be used
to further unity and push for the independence of a Muslim state on the
Philippines.
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The Island of Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago
Fidel Ramos, who had served as chief of staff of the armed forces under
Aquino, was elected president in 1992. Immediately after taking office, he
moved to restore the government’s peace negotiations with the MNLF.
Chairman Nur Misuari responded to this effort and explored negotiating
positions with the MNLF leadership. The result of these lengthy negoti-
ations was the Final Peace Accord signed by the Philippines government
and MNLF on September 2, 1996. Nur Misuari was elected governor of
the ARMM government in elections held later that year.
Salamat Hashim, who had founded the MNLF alongside Nur Misuari,
was born in Pagalungan, Maguindanao in 1942. He spent eleven years in
Cairo and studied Islam at Al-Azhar University. While a student, he came
into contact with Middle Eastern and African anti-colonial movements
and became greatly influenced by contemporary Islamist thought.
After the signing of the 1976 Tripoli Agreement between the Philippine
government and the MNLF, differences surfaced between Salamat
Hasihm and Nur Misuari over the goals of the Moro liberation movement
and how they were to be achieved. The MNLF split into a Misuari faction
based in the Sulu Archipelago and a Salamat faction based in Maguind-
anao and Lanao del Sur. These two factions would eventually enter into
armed conflict with each other.
In 1984, the Salamat faction broke with the MNLF and its Western secu-
larism, becoming the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). The MILF’s
aim was the establishment of an Islamic state based on Sharia law through
jihad. This was to protect the sanctity of Islam and the of Bangsamoro peo-
ple and ensure their right of self-determination. The modern leadership of
the MILF, figures like, Al-Haji Murad Ebrahim, Ghazali Jaafar, Mohagher
Iqbal, and Sammy Al Mansor, were with Salamat Hasihm when he broke
away from the MNLF to found the MILF.
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Chapter 1
But while the MNLF and MILF followed different paths, both were
fighting for justice for the Bangsamoro. As mentioned earlier, the MNLF’s
fight ended with the signing of the Final Peace Agreement with the Phil-
ippine government in 1996. But the MILF would continue to fight until
October 2012 when the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro (FAB)
was reached and an overall framework for peace was formally agreed
to. The MILF and Philippine government reached the Comprehensive
Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) in March 2014. This abolished the
ARMM government and clearly stated that a highly autonomous “Bang-
samoro government” would be created. With this agreement, justice for
the Bangsamoro had finally been achieved.
Own Governments
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The Island of Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago
In general, BIAF soldiers are farmers who only take up arms when needed
for patrols or emergencies. We referred to them as “farmer soldiers” and
they reminded me of the country samurai of Japan’s late feudal period.
One of the principles of the Bangsamoro liberation movement preached
by Salamat Hashim was “self-reliance,” the idea that all those who
participated in the great cause of the Bangsamoro were to do so through
their own efforts and strive for self-fulfillment. The BIAF’s soldiers thus
do not receive any salary from the MILF.
During the period when the fighting was raging across Mindanao, the
absence of male farmers meant that farming families were pushed into
a desperate state and women had to carry out all agricultural work by
themselves. Bangsamoro women are also included within the MILF’s
political and military hierarchies. A notable example of this is the
Bangsamoro Islamic Women’s Auxiliary Brigade (BIWAB) which includes
both young and middle-aged women. Members of the BIWAB protect the
home front, support their husbands and sons, and work hard at home
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Chapter 1
and in the fields. When fighting begins, they care for wounded soldiers
and provide logistical support such as food to the front. The members
of the BIWAB that I met at Camp Busrah were about twenty years old,
perhaps slightly older. They were young women who still seemed like
girls. Looking at these young women standing in formation, their innocent
faces surrounded by BIAF camo, I could only try to imagine what their
daily lives and feelings were like.
Incidentally, I’m a big fan of the Japanese history of the late 19th Century
and the Meiji Restoration, the time when feudal rule was overthrown and
Japan began modernizing. If time machines actually existed, I would go
back to that time to experience the rapid changes of the era and witness
the dawn of a new Japan alongside the likes of Shoin Yoshida, Shinsaku
Takasugi, Takayoshi Kido, Toshimichi Okubo, Takamori Saigo, and
Ryoma Sakamoto. When I was in middle school, I buried myself in the
historical novels of Ryotaro Shiba and Shotaro Ikenami, imagining what
it would have been like to interact with these great figures of history,
who were also considered rebels in their time but have come to be greatly
respected and revered.
On Mindanao, I frequently met with MILF leaders at the head of the Bang-
samoro liberation movement such as Chairman Al-Haji Murad Ebrahim.
These men had led from the front during their protracted armed revellion
against the Philippine military and then shrewdly negotiated with the
Philippine government. They were, overall, men with gentle and calm
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The Island of Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago
demeanors. But at times their eyes would take on a piercing look and I
would feel something akin to the intimidation that comes from being near
an intelligence and toughness. These men had devoted themselves to the
Bangsamoro liberation movement at a young age and now, after more
than forty years of being deprived of their chosen future, they felt that
they were finally going to be able to fulfill their responsibilities to their
families, comrades, and supporters. At some point I began to superimpose
them onto my heroes, the great Japanese figures of the late 19th Century.
And to think that perhaps I, a Japanese with the blood of the samurai,
could make some kind of contribution to the efforts of these mujahideen
of the MILF, these men who had risked their lives fighting to change the
still feudalistic politics and society of Muslim Mindanao and bring about
a new dawn for the Bangsamoro.
Rido
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Chapter 1
their loyalty and service. And when these elites enter into conflict with
one another over land and resources including local politics, the local
inhabitants are drawn in. These conflicts between elite families (clans)
are known as rido in the local language of Mindanao. It’s not rare for
parents, children, and siblings to end up fighting one another in these
conflicts. They are not only fought over resources and prestige or
over land and leadership; ridos can begin from truly trivial things, like
parents becoming involved in a fight between children on a basketball
court. These become fights where the honor of the family is at stake.
And if no resolution is found and the two sides in a rido continue to
antagonize each other, they may each call upon “greater powers”
to help. And with their entry, the rido has somehow now become a
conflict between the greater powers. It goes without saying that the
greater powers here are the Philippine military and the MILF. The IMT
thus pays close attention to potential ridos, monitoring those that do
occur and attempting to move the parties to a resolution. This is all in
an attempt to prevent a military confrontation between the military
and the MILF.
The ceremony was held from 10am to 4pm. After the moderator provided
an overview of the events that had led up to the ceremony, each of the
guests offered lengthy congratulatory speeches that boiled down to the
sentiment of “let us move forward with our eyes focused on the future,
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The Island of Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago
not looking back on the past.” Five members of each family then offered
their “pledge” to stop fighting: “The lives lost will never come back. May
we never fight again.” “Let’s work together to make the barangay better.”
One man was overcome with tears as he spoke, saying that he had “made
great mistakes.”
The climax of the event was the signing of a written oath by the families
and witnesses. In the oath, the families agreed to “never again engage in
this kind of fighting” and to pay 120,000 pesos (about 300,000 yen) in com-
pensation for each of the four dead. Two new M-16 assault rifles would
also be furnished to replace four rifles destroyed in the fighting. Six water
buffalos, thirty bags of rice, six well pumps, and one hundred backpacks
also arrived with the congratulations of the provincial governor.
The state of the barangay where the rido came to an end was wretched. The
ceremony was held in a local elementary school that had no classrooms,
just a roof and some pillars. The building is just left to the elements with
no maintenance. A clinic next door contained only tables and desks. And
there are only muddy, unpaved roads connecting the barangay to the
area’s major roads. As we travelled to the barangay by car, I repeatedly
hit my head on the roof.
The reason that attending the ceremony didn’t really sit right with me
was that I harbored doubts about whether the families truly regretted
their past actions. It’s a good thing that both sides were provided with a
certain degree of compensation as part of the resolution of the fighting.
But there was no sign that the core issues of “what caused you to fight in
the first place?” and “what needs to be done to prevent further conflict?”
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Chapter 1
I’ve heard that this kind of ceremony, has also been held in other barangays.
The reality of Mindanao is that we just can’t seem to eradicate the roots of
conflict. Ending the conflict between the Philippine government and the
MILF isn’t enough for Mindanao to truly be at peace. We have to wipe out
the ridos, these feudalistic conflicts. And for that to happen, it’s important
for the involved parties to have a broader understanding of their fighting
and for them to take ownership. And it had been our job, as third parties,
to make them realize that.
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