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WSWS : News
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: The
Philippines
Hostage standoff continues in war torn and impoverished southern
Philippines
By Peter Symonds
9 May 2000
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The plight of 21 hostages held for more than two weeks on the
Filipino island of Jolo has focused international media attention
on the situation in the southern Philippines. The captives, reportedly
sick and exhausted, include tourists from Germany, France, South
Africa, Finland and Lebanon as well as resort workers from Malaysia
and the Philippines. They were seized by Islamic fundamentalist
guerrillas on April 23 from the Malaysian diving resort of Sipadan
and taken to Jolo by sea.
The guerrilla group known as Abu Sayyaf (Father of the Sword)
has threatened to kill the hostages if its demand for $2.4 million
in ransom is not met. Up to 2,000 government troops including
special forces units have been dispatched to the island and last
week were engaged in a tense standoff after encircling the guerrilla
camp. An Abu Sayyaf spokesman warned that two of the hostages
would be beheaded if government troops did not pull back.
President Joseph Estrada has insisted that the government will
not pay the ransom but is under pressure from European governments
to allow an international mediator to talk with the guerrillas.
Former NATO head Javier Solana was due to arrive in the Philippines
yesterday. Estrada has flown to the southern island of Mindanao
and has indicated that he may consider guerrilla demands to replace
government negotiator Nur Misuari and provide money for development
projects in the area. Misuari is chairman of the Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF) and governor of the Autonomous Region
of Muslim Mindanao that was established when the MNLF signed a
peace deal with the government in 1996.
Malaysia is also putting pressure on Estrada indicating that
it wants to be involved in negotiations and may be prepared to
pay for the release of the hostages. It is also worth noting the
response of the Mahathir government to the seizure of the hostages
from the Malaysian resort. According to a report in the Manila
Bulletin, Malaysian authorities arrested more than 1,000 Filipinos
living near the resort and has already deported at least 761 on
suspicion of being involved in the kidnapping.
The raid came as the army was closing in on another Abu Sayyaf
group on the neighbouring island of Basilan where they were holding
27 teachers and children from Christian schools. These hostages
were seized and used as a human shield during a raid on March
20 on a local army detachment. As the military moved in, the guerrillas
beheaded two of the male teachers and last week killed a priest
and three other teachers. Fifteen of the hostages were freed during
a clash with the guerrillas but eight are still being held. In
this case, the demands of the Abu Sayyaf group include the release
of Ramzi Abdel Yousef, imprisoned in the US for allegedly masterminding
the attack on the World Trade Centre in New York
The actions of Abu Sayyaf will do nothing for the people of
the southern Philippines other than allow the government to drive
a wedge between Muslims and Christians and to justify a new round
of military repression throughout the area. But while the group's
terrorist methods must be condemned, it is also necessary to understand
the social and political conditions that have given rise to such
desperate measures. For more than three decades, a brutal civil
war has raged in the poverty-stricken Muslim areas of the southern
Philippines, claiming an estimated 120,000 lives.
In fact, there is every indication that the latest round of
fighting on Mindanao and neighbouring islands, including the Jolo
kidnappings, are the result of an attempt by President Estrada
to bolster his dwindling public support by pushing for a military
victory over the Islamic separatist guerrillas. The former film
actor Estrada, who was elected in May 1998 on the populist slogan
of Erap [Buddy] for the poor, is enmeshed in a string
of corruption scandals. His rating in the opinion polls has plummetted
as the social divide between rich and poor has continued to widen
as a result of his administration's economic policies.
Since the beginning of the year, the army has mounted a number
of operations throughout the southern Philippines against guerrilla
groups. In mid-February, eight army battalions waged an offensive
over nine days in Maguindanao province to capture Camp Omar, a
major stronghold of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF),
the largest guerrilla group fighting the government. More than
300 guerrillas died in the fighting.
The army offensive reinforced the hard-line message delivered
by Estrada during his lengthy visit to Mindanao from February
26 to March 2the longest ever presidential tour of the region.
He reiterated that the MILF and other Islamic separatist groups
had until June 30 to accept a peace deal that falls short of their
demand for an independent Islamic republic. Monsignor Hernando
Coronel, a spokesman for the Catholic Bishops Conference of the
Philippines, commented at the time: We are saddened that
President Estrada has ordered an intensification of conflict in
Mindanao. Needless to say, talks between the MILF and the
government in early March came to nothing.
Further fighting erupted on Mindanao in March. The MILF took
over the town of Kauswagan on March 19 and held it for 12 hours
before the army poured in 3,000 troops backed by tanks and helicopter
gunships. MILF leaders said the seizure of the town had been provoked
by a major army offensive against one of its strongholds in the
areaCamp Bilal. If we are pushed against the wall,
we have no other resource but to fight back, MILF military
chief Al Haj Murad warned.
Estrada visited the town soon after its recapture and boasted
to a cheering crowd that We will not spare any one of them
[the MILF]. He told reporters: We are seeking peace
but we will not allow our enemies to take advantage of this. They
should not make the mistake of repeating this because I have ordered
the Armed Forces to go all out against these terrorists.
Defence Secretary Orlando Mercado made clear that the government
had no intention of seriously negotiating with the MILF or any
other group. The only way to deal with a military problem
is through a military solution and we will pursue the MILF to
the end until its last soldier is killed. he said. According
to the military, more than 400 guerrillas were killed during its
operations and two MILF strongholds near KauswaganCamp Bilal
and Camp Jack Mackwere overrun.
Further negotiations between the government and the MILF were
due to have taken place on May 2. But the MILF walked out of the
talks claiming that the army was tightening the noose around another
baseits Maguindanao headquarters, Camp Abubakar. Troops
had moved into the area and launched air and ground attacks on
hundreds of guerrillas who had allegedly set up roadblocks around
the western boundary of Camp Abubakar. The MILF responded a week
ago with a series of bomb attacks in local towns that left at
least four people dead and dozens injured.
It is in this context that the kidnappings took place on Basilan
and then from Malaysia. While the two guerrilla outfits are not
formally linked or allied, the military pressure on the MILF will
undoubtedly have been felt in areas controlled by Abu Sayyaf.
The emergence of Islamic separatism
The term Moro derives from the time of Spanish
colonisation and was used in a derogatory way to refer to the
predominantly Muslim population in the southern Philippines. From
the mid-16th to the end of the 19th century Spain subordinated
most of the Filipino archipelago to its rule and converted most
of the lowland population of Luzon and the Visayas to Christianity.
But it was only able to establish a few outposts on Mindanaothe
second largest island in the groupthat continued to be dominated
by a series of Islamic sultanates.
After taking colonial possession of the Philippines in the
wake of its victory in the Spanish-American war of 1896-98, the
US exploited the divisions between Christian and Muslim by forming
an alliance with the Moro sultanates against the Filipino nationalist
movement. Having pacified Luzon and the Visayas, the
US then extended its military control over Mindanao and cultivated
local Moro leaders as props for its colonial administration.
The Philippines was granted independence in 1946. But throughout
the last five decades the Filipino bourgeoisie has proven completely
incapable of resolving the ethnic and religious conflicts on Mindanao.
In fact, the post-war governments greatly heightened tensions
by encouraging large numbers of the rural poor to move to Mindanao
without providing adequate services or infrastructure either for
the local population or the newly arrived settlers. By the late
1960s, Muslims on Mindanao comprised just 25 percent of the total
population as compared to 75 percent at the turn of the 20th century.
Moreover much of the productive agricultural land had been taken
over by corporations or settlers while logging companies had been
granted huge timber concessions throughout the islands.
The growing conflicts led to the formation of private armies
by both settler and local elites and brutal armed clashes. But
it was not until the 1970s that the Moro National Liberation Front
(MNLF) was formed as a result of the growing grievances of Philippine
Muslims. One incident in particular is still marked each yearthe
so-called Jabidah massacre in 1968, in which at least 28 young
Muslim army recruits were killed by their superiors. The MNLF
claims that the recruits had rebelled after being told they were
being sent to Sabah to fight fellow Muslims.
The army, working together with paramilitary and private armies,
has prosecuted a brutal and bloody war of suppression on the island
for over three decades. According to government estimates, about
120,000 people have died in the war, more than a million have
been made homeless and over 200,000 Muslims have fled to neighbouring
Sabah in Malaysia. Fighting escalated after president Ferdinand
Marcos declared martial law throughout the Philippines in 1972
following a Muslim uprising in Marawi City. The high point occurred
in February 1972, when during a fierce two-day battle for Jolo,
the military shelled the town from the sea, setting it ablaze
and killing between 500 and 2,000 people.
Having failed to win a decisive military victory, Marcos negotiated
with the MNLF with the assistance of the Organisation of Islamic
Conference (OIC) and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, who had been
providing assistance to the separatists. The resulting Tripoli
agreement signed in 1976 provided limited autonomy to 13 of the
23 provinces in the southern Philippines but broke down in its
implementation.
Fighting resumed and the MNLF began to fragment under the impact
of the emergence of fundamentalist Islamic tendencies in the Middle
East and elsewhere. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front, initially
formed as a breakaway New MNLF in 1978 after the breakdown
of the Tripoli agreement, drew most of its leadership from Islamic
scholars with a traditional religious or aristocratic background.
Whereas the MNLF had appealed to all Moros on a regional
or ethnic basis regardless of their religion, the MILF defined
itself as an Islamic organisation.
Abu Sayyaf was founded in the mid-1980s by the Islamic scholar
Abdurajak Abubakar Janjalani who advocated a pure
form of Islam along the lines of Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan
including disapproval of TV and movies, dancing and popular songs.
Janjalani and other Abu Sayyaf members are believed to have fought
in Afghanistan with the CIA-backed Islamic guerrillas against
the Soviet-supported regime in Kabul. Several commentators have
suggested that the group has degenerated into little more than
a band of armed thugs after Janjalani was killed in a shootout
with police in late 1998.
Following the collapse of the Marcos dictatorship in February
1986, Cory Aquino continued the war on Mindanao and at the same
time sought to reach a new deal with the MNLF. The autonomy proposal
contained in an Organic Act for the Autonomous Region in Muslim
Mindanao (ARMM) was, however, even more limited than the previous
Tripoli agreement covering only four provinces instead of 13.
It was not until September 1996 under president Fidel Ramos that
a deal was finally concluded with the MNLF but rejected by the
MILF and Abu Sayyaf.
The MNLF leader Nur Misuari now presides as governor over the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. But the agreement remains
precarious. The MNLF is disgruntled because the ARMM administration
lacks any real powers and has failed to receive the funds promised
under the agreement. At a meeting on March 18 to commemorate the
1968 Jabidah massacre, MNLF leaders berated the Estrada government
for its failure to fulfill promises under the peace accord and
warned that it would be forced to take up arms again. Misuari
commented: I have no reasons to be satisfied. Even National
Security Adviser Alexander Aguirre admitted that the initial implementation
of the peace accord was a failure.
The discontent in the southern Philippines is fueled by the
appalling social conditions facing much of the populationthe
Muslim dominated areas are the most backward in what is one of
the poorest countries in South East Asia. According to the 1997
Philippine Human Development Report, five of the predominantly
Muslim provinces are among the six categorised as the worst off
of the country's 74 provinces. An Education Department report
for 1994 revealed that the proportion of people in the ARMM over
15 years of age who had not completed even one year of schooling
was 27.8 percent as compared to a national average of 3.7 percent.
Since then the region has been hard hit by both the Asian financial
crisis and a severe drought in 1997-98.
For all his braggadocio about being for the poor,
Estrada's policies, which are in line with the demands of the
International Monetary Fund to open up the country to foreign
investment, will only exacerbate the social divide between rich
and poor. While the demand for an Islamic state for Mindanao's
Muslim population is a complete political and economic dead-end,
the various Moro groupings are able to exploit widespread hostility,
anger and desperation particularly among young people for their
own purposes. The outcome has been the seizure of the hostages
from Malaysia. This is not the first such incident and almost
certainly will not be the last.
See Also:
Philippines president buys
a little time by ending Cha Cha reforms and reshuffling cabinet
[8 February 2000]
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