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The escalation of conflict between government troops and Muslim separatist rebels in several
areas of Mindanao Island has affected the lives of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians.
Mindanao is located in south Philippines.
The intensified fighting began after a peace agreement was rejected by many politicians, and
finally by the Philippine Supreme Court. Critics believe the agreement was unconstitutional since
it would compromise the sovereignty of the Republic of the Philippines. They added that the
agreement would pave the way for the establishment of a separate Moro-controlled state within the
territories of the country.
Angered by the rejection of the agreement, a rebel commander attacked military posts which
produced civilian casualties. The government retaliated by launching offensives against the
territories controlled by the rebels.
The fighting has not stopped. More than 610,000 people have been displaced already. The non-stop
fighting has created several “ghost
towns” in some provinces of Mindanao. The situation of
refugees is deteriorating. Children
are among those who are suffering the most.
Muslim groups want the government to stop the indiscriminate air strikes by the
military. Like a Rolling Store uploads a
report by a humanitarian mission which visited several evacuation sites in Mindanao:
“The offensives have led to mass evacuations. In the evacuation centers, the displaced
persons suffer from inadequate facilities. Most of them have set up tents in whatever public
place available. With heavy rains and flooding now common at this time of year, many child
evacuees are sick with cough, cold, fever, and diarrhea. A number of evacuees have died of
disease. There is also the trauma experienced by the evacuees, particularly the children.”
Dr. Carol Araullo, a member of the humanitarian mission, emphasizes that more help is
needed:
“The hunger, sickness and generalized misery; the listlessness, the yearning to go back to
their farms and homes safely; the appeal for a return to normalcy, for an end to the military
restrictions over their comings and goings – these images and plaints became
etched in our minds and hearts as we went from one evacuation center to another.
“Scores of victims of human rights abuses were interviewed: those wrongfully arrested,
those beaten up because they were rebel suspects or so that they would point to the rebels/rebel
sympathizers; those whose relatives had been killed or were injured in the course of the
government’s drive to flush out the “rogue elements” of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front; those whose houses and other properties had been destroyed.
“After the teams had tallied the numbers of patients treated, families given relief goods
and victims of human rights violations attended to, we came to the sobering conclusion that what
the Mission had achieved was a mere drop in the bucket compared to the overwhelming needs.”
Journalist Edwin Espejo was affected by what he
witnessed:
“Deep into the heart of the conflict, trails of destruction – burnt
houses, abandoned homes and ubiquitous presence of checkpoints and war materiel
– are eerie testaments of the war.
“Of course, we are living in troubled times and disturbing scenes are fast numbing
one’s senses. Many would argue that journalists covering the conflict in Mindanao cannot
afford to be emotionally attached to events unfolding before their very eyes.
“Yet one cannot totally dissociate his or her self from realizing that the war is affecting
not only the combatants from both sides of the conflicts. It is also sublimely creating different
levels of consciousness and commitment on journalists covering the war and affecting the quality
of their reportage.”
“While many of the politicians and top government officials based in Manila are busy in
expressing their contrasting opinions about the issues related to the “ancestral
domain”, I wonder how the displaced locales of North Cotabato and neighboring provinces are
faring. Do they have any food to ease their hunger? Do they have any medicine or medical
attention to ease their pains? Can they ever sleep amidst the horror of the ongoing
circumstances, or to simplify my question, can they find a shelter, no matter how temporary it
is- for a night's sleep?”
The fighting is turning uglier everyday. An Al Jazeera team has learned that the government has
been recruiting
vigilantes to fight the rebels:
“Civilians are being given jobs normally the preserve of the police and army at an alarming
rate across Mindanao. In North Cotabato Al Jazeera met some new recruits being put through their
paces in a military-backed militia programme that normally takes three months. This training
programme has been accelerated to just six weeks in order to fill what the authorities regard as
a security vacuum.”
Watch the report of Al Jazeera:
And Part II of the report:
The rebel commander who is probably the most wanted man in the
Philippines today insists in a video interview that it was government troops who first
attacked the rebels.
Another controversy is the alleged involvement of
US troops in the fighting. Himagsik Kayumanggi reports:
“US Special Forces were sighted inside the 64th Infantry Battalion Camp in Datu Saudi
Ampatuan, Maguindanao. Bai Ali Indayla of the Moro human rights group Kawagip testified that the
soldiers were engaged in covert operations, such as the supervision of drones or spy planes and
predator missile strikes. This was confimed by Major Gen. Eugenio Cedo, then commander of the
Western Mindanao Command. As usual, the US Embassy denied that the soldiers were involved in
actual combat; they were only responding to the military request for aerial surveillance to
determine conditions of the terrain and visibility, for “future civil-military
projects,” to quote Rebecca Thompson, US Embassy Information Officer.”
Peace
advocates want both parties – the government and Muslim rebels
– to call for a ceasefire. There is an online petition
asking the government to cease its military operations in Mindanao. A letter
was sent to the Holy Pope to intervene. The Philippines is a Catholic-dominated country:
“We hope that Your Holiness could help us bring peace and justice to our brothers and
sisters in Mindanao by expressing concern about the unfolding humanitarian crisis and appeal for
restraint for the protection of all civilians, as well as for the opening of access for the
provision of speedy humanitarian assistance to the affected population.”
“Blogging might not only be limited to blogging about Mindanao and its peoples but also
helping the “voiceless” learn to blog so they, too, can blog about themselves.
“Of course it would be extremely difficult for existing Mindanao bloggers to access many of
the areas safely and for the people in communities to approach which local bloggers can help
them.
But bloggers must continue to try linking them and engaging them for mutual respect and
understanding in an effort to connect more and more people.
Many of us who are already blogging about the voiceless must continue doing it and infect others
to do the same.
We can focus on a Mindanao consciousness that is more inclusive, not exclusive.”
Determined batting and heavy rain stopped South Africa's push for victory on the third day of the
first Test against Bangladesh at Springbok Park, Bloemfontain.img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/rss/edition_sport/~4/JkOhUXzNAwE" height="1" width="1"/
Determined batting and heavy rain stopped South Africa's push for victory on the third day of the
first Test against Bangladesh at Springbok Park, Bloemfontain. pa
href="http://rss.cnn.com/~a/rss/edition_sport?a=FR6UaX"img
src="http://rss.cnn.com/~a/rss/edition_sport?i=FR6UaX" border="0"/img/a/pimg
src="http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/edition_sport/~4/460813369" height="1" width="1"/
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