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Muslim World News Updates |
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12 April 2009 The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF),
speaking through Muhammad Ameen, chairperson of its
Secretariat, expressed its highest appreciation for
the European Union Council and Commission open gesture
“to advance the peace negotiations, including by means
of facilitation if requested, as well as through
support for the International Monitoring Team
responsible for overseeing the ceasefire between the
military and the MILF”.
“This is a triumph of diplomacy over militarism being
pushed by some members of the Arroyo’s Cabinet,” Ameen
said.
However, he did not make a direct comment on the
offer, saying this is a matter exclusively in the
domain of the MILF central committee.
The EU also suggested that the role of the
International Monitoring Team could be enhanced
through a stronger mandate for investigations and
through an agreed policy of making its findings
public.
Among other matters, the EU also expressed its grave
concern at the hundreds of cases of extrajudicial
killings of political activists and journalists that
have occurred in recent years in the Philippines, and
the role that the security forces have played in
orchestrating and perpetrating those murders;
It also called on the GRP to investigate cases of
extrajudicial executions and enforced disappearances;
calls at the same time on the GRP to put into place an
independent monitoring mechanism to oversee the
investigation and prosecution of perpetrators of such
acts.
Following is the European Parliament resolution of 12
Mar 2009 on the Philippines:
– having regard to the Declaration of 15 September
2008 by the Presidency on behalf of the EU on the
situation in Mindanao,
– having regard to the appeal issued by the
Ambassadors of the European Union and the United
States of America and the Australian Embassy's deputy
head of mission on 29 January 2009,
– having regard to the third session of the Tripartite
Review of the implementation of the 1996 Peace
Agreement between the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)
and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines
(GRP) from 11 to 13 March 2009,
– having regard to the Hague Joint Declaration by the
GRP and the National Democratic Front of the
Philippines (NDFP) of 1 September 1992 and the First
and Second Oslo Joint Statements of 14 February and of
3 April 2004,
– having regard to the Commission's Country Strategy
Paper 2007-2013 for the Philippines, the programme of
support to the Peace Process under the Stability
Instrument and the negotiations for a Partnership and
Cooperation Agreement between the EU and the
Philippines,
– having regard to its previous resolutions on the
Philippines, notably that of 26 April 2007 (1), and
reaffirming its support for the peace negotiations
between the GRP and NDFP as expressed in its
resolutions of 17 July 1997 (2) and 14 January 1999
(3),
– having regard to Rule 115(5) of its Rules of
Procedure,
A. whereas several armed groups, notably the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), have been combating
government troops in the southern part of the
Philippines since 1969, in one of Asia's
longest-running insurgencies,
B. whereas the conflict between the GRP and the
insurgents of the NDFP has claimed more than 40 000
lives and sporadic violence has continued despite the
2003 ceasefire and peace talks,
C. whereas hostilities between government forces and
the MILF in Mindanao resumed in August 2008 after the
Supreme Court of the Philippines declared
unconstitutional the Memorandum of Agreement between
the MILF and the GRP on the Ancestral Domain, which
would have given substantial autonomy to the
Bangsamoro nation,
D. whereas the renewed fighting has killed over one
hundred and displaced approximately 300 000 people,
many of whom are still in evacuation centres,
E. whereas Malaysia, the peace facilitator, withdrew
its ceasefire monitors from Mindanao in April 2008 due
to the lack of progress in the peace process, but is
willing to reconsider its role if the GRP clarifies
its negotiating position,
F. whereas peace talks between the GRP and the NDFP
have stalled since 2004 and whereas the Norwegian
Government has made great efforts to encourage both
sides to resume formal talks,
G. whereas hundreds of activists, trade unionists,
journalists and religious leaders in the Philippines
have been killed or abducted since 2001 and the GRP
denies any involvement of the security forces and the
army in these political killings, despite ample
evidence to the contrary,
H. whereas there were several cases in 2008 in which
local courts found the arrest and detention of
activists to be unlawful and ordered their release,
but where those same people were subsequently
rearrested and charged with rebellion or murder,
I. whereas the judiciary in the Philippines is not
independent, while lawyers and judges are also subject
to harassment and killings; whereas witness
vulnerability makes it impossible to effectively
investigate criminal offences and prosecute those
responsible for them,
J. whereas, in the case of most of these extrajudicial
killings, no formal criminal investigation has been
opened and the perpetrators remain unpunished despite
many government claims that it has adopted measures to
stop the killings and bring their perpetrators to
justice,
K. whereas in April 2008 the UN Human Rights Council
examined the situation in the Philippines and stressed
the impunity of those responsible for extrajudicial
killings and enforced disappearances, but the GRP
rejected recommendations for a follow-up report,
L. whereas in order to put an end to abductions and
extrajudicial killings it is necessary to address the
economic, social and cultural root causes of violence
in the Philippines,
1. Expresses its grave concern about the hundreds of
thousands of internally displaced people in Mindanao,
calls on the GRP and the MILF to do all in their power
to bring about a situation which allows people to
return home, and calls for enhanced national and
international action to protect and to work towards
the rehabilitation of the displaced persons;
2. Believes strongly that the conflict can only be
resolved through dialogue, and that the resolution of
this long-standing insurgency is essential for the
sake of the overall development of the Philippines;
3. Calls on the GRP to urgently resume peace
negotiations with the MILF and to clarify the status
and future of the Memorandum of Agreement after the
above-mentioned Supreme Court ruling; welcomes the
GRP's announcement that it intends to drop
preconditions for the resumption of talks;
4. Welcomes the talks, facilitated by Norway, between
the GRP and the NDFP in Oslo in November 2008 and
hopes, in this case also, that formal negotiations can
rapidly resume; calls on the parties to comply with
their bilateral agreements for the JMC, to meet in
accordance with the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect
for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL)
and to allow joint investigations of human rights
violations;
5. Calls on the Council and the Commission to provide
and facilitate support and assistance to the parties
in implementing the CARHRIHL, notably through
development, relief and rehabilitation programmes;
6. Calls on the European Council and the Commission to
support the GRP in its efforts to advance the peace
negotiations, including by means of facilitation if
requested, as well as through support for the
International Monitoring Team responsible for
overseeing the ceasefire between the military and the
MILF;
7. Suggests that the role of the International
Monitoring Team could be enhanced through a stronger
mandate for investigations and through an agreed
policy of making its findings public;
8. Calls on the GRP to increase development aid to
Mindanao in order to improve the desperate living
conditions of the local population and welcomes the
financial support of more than EUR 13 million in food
and non-food aid which the EU has given to Mindanao
since fighting restarted in August 2008;
9. Expresses its grave concern at the hundreds of
cases of extrajudicial killings of political activists
and journalists that have occurred in recent years in
the Philippines, and the role that the security forces
have played in orchestrating and perpetrating those
murders;
10. Calls on the GRP to investigate cases of
extrajudicial executions and enforced disappearances;
calls at the same time on the GRP to put into place an
independent monitoring mechanism to oversee the
investigation and prosecution of perpetrators of such
acts;
11. Calls on the GRP to adopt measures to end the
systematic intimidation and harassment of political
and human rights activists, members of civil society,
journalists and witnesses in criminal prosecutions,
and to ensure truly effective witness protection;
12. Reiterates its request to the Philippine
authorities to allow the UN special bodies dealing
with human rights protection unrestricted access to
the country; urges, also, the authorities to swiftly
adopt and implement laws to incorporate the
international human rights instruments (e.g. against
torture and enforced disappearances) which have been
ratified into national law;
13. Calls on the Council and the Commission to ensure
that the EU's financial assistance towards economic
development in the Philippines is accompanied by
scrutiny of possible violations of economic, social
and cultural rights, with special attention being paid
to encouraging dialogue and inclusion of all groups in
society;
14. Instructs its President to forward this resolution
to the Council, the Commission, the President and
Government of the Republic of the Philippines, the
MILF, the NDFP, the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights and the governments of the ASEAN Member States.
Notes
(1) OJ C 74 E, 20.3.2008, p. 788.
(2) OJ C 286, 22.9.1997, p. 245.
(3) OJ C 104, 14.4.1999, p. 116. |