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Road to Nowhere? Peace Efforts in the Southern Philippines

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The plight of the southern Philippines is a lesson in how not to undertake a peace process. It especially illuminates the pitfalls of negotiating without the wholehearted commitment of the stakeholders, especially the central government. Successive regimes in Manila have made feints at achieving a settlement in Mindanao, but the national leadership has been in turns half-hearted, dilatory and insincere. So the south remains in turmoil despite the best intentions and unflagging efforts of peace advocates. Whatever else, the so-called Mindanao problem has much to teach the international community about intractable warfare. Hard-won lessons in this southernmost and second largest island of the Philippines can undoubtedly contribute to understanding civil unrest and the challenges of peace-building in general.

Often dismissed as a religious war, the conflict in Mindanao is far too complicated for simplistic labels. Centuries ago, when Spanish (and then American) invaders established control across the archipelago, the southern region was already part of a tide of Malay Islam which resisted Manila-based incursions vigorously. But mainly the Moros – the indigenous Muslims – thrived in an atmosphere of benign neglect. After independence, however, the central power became more assertive and Mindanao fell subject to a form of internal imperialism. The centrifugal impulse towards separatism grew ever stronger among increasingly alienated clans and tribes. It remains difficult for a largely Islamic and fiercely independent bangsamoro homeland to identify with a Catholicized, neo-colonial Philippine nationalism. Economic exploitation and rapacious development have compounded feelings of exclusion and powerlessness among Moros, lumads (indigenous peoples), and the landless poor.

This Mindanao imbroglio permits the enemies of peace to manipulate complex issues for their own purposes. In such cases, academe, the media, and other opinion makers have a special responsibility to speak truth to power and provide some much-needed analysis. This sort of rigor has been absent in Philippine public life, allowing the worst rogues to reinvent themselves at will and even to interfere with peace initiatives ostensibly to protect the constitution and the sovereignty of the state, thus revealing the difficulties of a weak polity in achieving a political settlement with a disgruntled, rebellious, and distant territory.

During decades of vicious fighting between the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and a series of secessionist groups, Mindanao has occasionally appeared to be poised on the brink of peace as various political settlements moved towards fruition. The fate of these initiatives explains the nature of the turmoil in the south. Peace efforts since the 1976 Tripoli Agreement reveal a process which insiders appear unable to put into perspective and outsiders simply do not comprehend.

The Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) under its charismatic leader Nur Misuari led the modern struggle for Muslim independence until surrendering to the administration of Fidel Ramos in 1996 (the so-called Davao Consensus). Such arrangements invariably work in favor of the central government, itself too corrupt and cash-strapped to honor its commitments. Development funds go astray and in the 1996 case Ramos even appears to have introduced the dreaded Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) into the volatile equation as a means of compromising the Moro cause and linking it to Islamic extremism. And by 2001, Washington had branded Mindanao the Second Front in the new War on Terror. The southern Philippines was dragged into a global predicament and its problems became ever more complicated.

Bangsamoro Basic Law

Most recently, a Memorandum of Agreement – Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD) between the government of the Philippines (GPH) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) achieved widespread acceptance, only to be knocked down by the Supreme Court in 2008 as unconstitutional. This in turn led to renewed fighting and the formation of the ruthless Bangsamoro Freedom Fighters (BFF). The latest incarnation of the peace process is the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), an initiative which comes after further drawn out negotiations between the GPH and the MILF. It is intended to put in place a Bangsamoro Autonomous Region (BAR), thereby replacing the existing Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), which has not lived up to expectations or quieted secessionist rumblings in the south. But the BBL has serious problems.

The impetus for talks emerged largely from a realization by the warring parties that nothing more could be achieved from the fighting other than the peace of the graveyard. But such a shared perception is not in or of itself a sound basis for a settlement of fundamental differences. Something more than exhaustion is required, especially if flare-ups and misunderstandings are to be avoided. On January 25, 2015, a contingent of the Philippine National Police (PNP) was ambushed near the township of Mamasapano and 44 commandos were killed along with a number of Moro fighters and civilians.

In the aftermath of this Mamasapano Massacre and with the BBL looking moribund, the Aquino administration convened a group of luminaries to examine the troubled proposal and create a popular consensus around it. Both the government and the various dignitaries who accepted the invitation to serve on this Peace Council showed extraordinary hubris, but a National Peace Summit was duly held in April to seek views and recommendations. The Peace Council ultimately declared: “While imperfect, [the BBL] is a significant document that should serve as catalyst for building national consensus.” Less clear was the impact of these “responsible and respected leaders” on the general public.

Above all, efforts were being made to endorse the package while conceding that there was need for repairs. A new form of government for the Islamic communities of Mindanao was being appraised on behalf of an extremely suspicious national polity. Various features of the BBL, it was decided, should be defined or refined – or declined. Much of the 196-page report is loquacious, dense, and legalistically abstruse, but its particular failing was that it could not convince a skeptical populace about the value of the BBL. Time is running out for this peace settlement.

Lessons

Meanwhile, the burdens of the conflict allow some useful comparisons with civil unrest elsewhere, including Africa and places like Sri Lanka and Burma. There are many lessons to be learned, some of which are very depressing. How a deeply riven polity can overcome entrenched socio-cultural divisions is a case in point. Mindanao’s painful journey into (or away from) the Philippine nation provides some pointers. That nothing can be done without honest brokers would seem to be especially instructive. On the other hand, the scrutiny of players by reputable and reliable non-players has succeeded only at a superficial level. And the modern habit of describing everyone as stakeholders is especially deceptive, undermining as it does the fact that some people have infinitely more at stake than others. And a few so-called spoilers (foremost among which are splinter groups on both sides) wield far too much power.

Many critics assert, for example, that the part of the armed forces in Mindanao has been consistently disruptive and bellicose. Officers actively seek appointments there, balancing personal risk against valor awards and rapid promotion. Apart from the moral issue of receiving medals for killing one’s countrymen (and women and children), the military elite serves too many functions and asserts too much power in the present situation. With its impunity and immunity, the AFP in Mindanao has become a parallel government, imposing its will on a countryside enduring quasi-martial law. This situation provides an opportunity to evaluate the role of armed forces in civil unrest, which is essential to understanding the militarization of peace. All that appears to have been offered to the bangsamoro people is a means to comply with the ambitions of Imperial Manila and “return to the fold of the law.”

Potential gains from a successful agreement are high, but not as high as anticipated by those who tend to link such an achievement with improved governance, public services, development, and tourism. Such returns are possible, but the outcomes of a peace deal and the establishment of a new autonomous region in the south simply cannot – and should not? – be quantified in such a way. In particular, too many stakeholders emphasize a form of developmentalism and economic transition which threaten indigenous interests and would drive many Moros back to armed resistance. Indeed, a major stumbling block for peace in Mindanao is a fundamental lack of agreement about what that actually means!

The current autonomy proposal is itself a compromised compromise. It was not the end point for Muslim separatists and any thwarting of modified Moro aspirations will put independence back on the agenda, along with renewed fighting and a deepening of the insurgent struggle. At present the impulse to independence is contained within breakaway groups like the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF), which lack either clear goals or capable leaders. They comprise mainly old men, but their message has begun to resonate within youth assemblies. With the BBL’s downward trajectory, Manila’s machinations, and the general anti-Moro sentiments of so many Filipinos will likely condemn any and all moves towards a workable new autonomy agreement and leave Mindanao wracked by another generation of unrest.

“The implementation of all peace agreements and legislation of any Basic Law must be inclusive,” the influential Cotabato-based Institute for Autonomy and Governance (IAG) concluded in a recent study. “An autonomy arrangement ‘franchised’ by a group or individual is bound to fail. Processes and structures moving forward must involve and be supported by all key stakeholders including minority groups”. In its upbeat and positivist report, the IAG emphasized four main considerations. First, it argues that agreements between the Philippine government and successive Moro fronts have been “good roadmaps for the evolving development of meaningful autonomy.” But such a claim needs to be based upon some successful outcome; the IAG has chosen to ignore the fact that Mindanao may be further away from a settlement than ever.

Second, the IAG warns that full adoption of the BBL (or any other peace agreement) is not possible in current circumstances. Yet the BBL is an organic document and it is difficult to imagine what a partial implementation might look like. It would certainly have little support.

Third, the BBL remains mired in a legacy “of weaknesses in the national bureaucracy … and the timidity and lack of capacity of the autonomous government.” So the IAG insists that capacities must be increased and reforms achieved, but this sort of challenge should surely have been resolved earlier in the negotiations. Fourth, the BBL must be inclusive and take into account previous agreements. Pre-existing promises made to the MNLF should be recognized. But such high-minded fiats fail to acknowledge that there has been a centrifugal force at work all along, a path in negotiations marked by defections, factionalism, and disagreements. Many parties do not want to participate and reject inclusivity as a form of compulsion. By the IAG’s own admission, the BBL is in a state of “suspended animation.” Ideas about moving forward assume that the direction is clear and accepted by all, yet at the moment the players in the Mindanao drama seem to lack even a reliable compass.

In the mass of self-serving criticism, the constitutional shortcomings of the BBL have become paramount. A similar device was previously used to destroy the MOA-AD. An obsessive emphasis on legalities simply provides a place for spoilers of whatever ilk to hide, bide their time, then ultimately derail the agreement. The persistent damage caused by an immense lack of goodwill, an extraordinary amount of fear and suspicion, failure of leadership, and eye-watering corruption and duplicity on the part of official agencies and various other parties goes largely unrecognized.

Many observers point to the BBL as being aspirational in nature, but this rather misses the point. To argue, as the IAG does, that it is a “roadmap document” ignores the depth of ill-will waiting on this particular highway to hell. Build on incremental gains, the IAG concludes; a phalanx of weary peace advocates thought they were essentially doing that in order to progress beyond the debacle of the MOA-AD and all that had gone before.

Death Knell

The congressional process will probably be the death knell for the BBL. While the chair of a 75-member ad hoc committee boasted about arranging 32 public hearings and “the most comprehensive and inclusive consultations in the history of the House of Representatives,” he was also pronouncing the demise of the BBL in a fractious and debilitating gabfest. After much contrived delay, the BBL finally went before the two houses of Congress, where it literally fell among thieves (sadly, this is no metaphor; an embarrassing number of legislators have been caught up in the so-called Pork Barrel scandal, including Senator Ferdinand [BongBong] Marcos, Jr, the son of the dictator, who has done much to damage the BBL. If it should even survive parliamentary review, the Supreme Court has indicated serious constitutional concerns. And a plebiscite must follow these interminable considerations. The BBL is being talked to death!

While the rest of the country deals with the shameful news that BongBong Marcos is running for vice-president in next year’s elections, the senator traduces those who fought and died to rid the Philippines of his father’s dictatorship – even as he destroys any chance for peace in the south by imposing impossible constraints on the BBL. Now a clutch of Mindanao groups under the leadership of Orlando Quevedo, Cardinal Archbishop of Cotabato, is fighting back with a public appeal for a workable peace. They seek acceptance of the original BBL, pointing out that the Marcos version is unconstitutional, misleading, and counter-productive. The stakes are high: If Quevedo and his desperate allies do not prevail, the future is certain to be as violent as the past.

But Marcos is not alone. Few stakeholders have treated the peace negotiations openly and honestly; the BBL will surely now disappear under the barrage of fearful Islamophobia, cynical partisanship, vested interest, and massive inertia. Not enough people outside of local communities, those directly affected by the fighting, even want a new autonomous entity in Mindanao. The island of seems to be in the grip of an intractable conflict between successive administrations in Manila and the insurgent forces fighting for a bangsamoro homeland in the south. But if there is any prospect for peace at all, it lies with unpacking the past and challenging perceptions of archipelagic history which maintain and strengthen the ruinous status quo. The only way forward is to recognize that the Mindanao predicament has been fashioned by entrenched elites and powerful economic interests, which use historical imperatives as a weapon against any consensus for peace.

A political process cannot be carried forward without an immense amount of goodwill and enthusiasm. Yet the BBL has been beaten into its present shape on an anvil of distrust and dissembling. Such rough diplomacy should not be allowed to compromise a reasonable outcome, which can only be achieved through a formula recognizing what is achievable and what is necessary. At this stage the BBL simply has not fired the popular imagination; the need for peace must be more generally appreciated. When the powers-that-be seek only immediate political gains and are not wholly committed to the overall endeavor, failure is certain. The outgoing Aquino administration bears much of the blame for the current impasse, but there is little reward in criticizing a do-nothing regime for doing nothing, especially in regard to confronting the forces arrayed against any accommodation with the Moros.

The passage of the latest peace initiative, along with the establishment of a new sub-state in the south, has fallen behind schedule. The Mamasapano Massacre at the beginning of 2015 led to the suspension of the BBL amidst a veritable tsunami of Islamophobia, finger-pointing, and accusation. Sadly, the eclipse of Moro dreams and the derailing of endeavors by peace advocates raise the likelihood of renewed conflict in Mindanao. The resolution of the crisis lies in its past; solving the crisis would require an overhaul of the prevailing perception of Philippine history and, ipso facto, a reworking of ideas about nation and nationalism. Is the Philippine experience inclusive or exclusive? This dilemma is not likely to be resolved any time soon. Hence Mindanao’s current impasse; hence its misery.

Road to Nowhere? Peace Efforts in the Southern Philippines | The Diplomat
 
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Philippine government is the one to be blamed for the whole mess in Mindanao

Too much greedy officers and politician, not to mention the Jabidah Massacre is the trigger of this long conflict. Although originally the Southerner is only want to live in peace before Manila bertraying them
 
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Philippine government is the one to be blamed for the whole mess in Mindanao

Too much greedy officers and politician, not to mention the Jabidah Massacre is the trigger of this long conflict. Although originally the Southerner is only want to live in peace before Manila bertraying them

Not really
 
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Philippine government is the one to be blamed for the whole mess in Mindanao

Too much greedy officers and politician, not to mention the Jabidah Massacre is the trigger of this long conflict. Although originally the Southerner is only want to live in peace before Manila bertraying them
Aquino is the main culprit. He would rather see his country split into turmoil or civil war than drop fighting about right of spratly with China. He is not a true filippino. He sold his soul to American to do their bidding while claim he is a patriotic for his country.

Not really
Aquino is the main reason.
 
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Not really

Malisbong Massacre? Burning of Jolo? How many massacre you did in the past and current conflict against Muslim?

Yeah sure, Philippine government is innocent like a fucking asshole in this conflict, even blames Malaysian for their incompetence and corrupt way of thinking.
 
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Aquino is the main culprit. He would rather see his country split into turmoil or civil war than drop fighting about right of spratly with China. He is not a true filippino. He sold his soul to American to do their bidding while claim he is a patriotic for his country.


Aquino is the main reason.

Wow really this is why people hate you guys

Malisbong Massacre? Burning of Jolo? How many massacre you did in the past and current conflict against Muslim?

Yeah sure, Philippine government is innocent like a fucking asshole in this conflict, even blames Malaysian for their incompetence and corrupt way of thinking.

Ya you forget too that moro killed Christians too same way and people would do the same to them its eye for an eye war back then but no its different its just kidnapping and minor skirmishes the Malaysians did fund and train them but in the end the same people turn on them too. The Point is people learn now that if they wanna prosper there must be peace and its on its way but people are uneasy simply because of past history everyone is to blame for this conflict its simply the Government or the moros or even the Malaysians its everyone because people its that simple
 
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You are the real rot of Philippine. By obeying US master and ignoring the problem of internal that allow disintergration of Philippine. Listening to US master does not show how patriotic you are but a patriot to US. :lol:

Oh my god just stop seriously nobody likes you people here this reply of yours simply the result of uneducated maoist propaganda and racist calling us names like that if we still under Americans you cant boss us around because we have F18s and F16s kicking you arrogant SOBs back to hell just how we kick you sorry behinds in battle of yultong and Erie hill.
 
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Oh my god just stop seriously nobody likes you people here this reply of yours simply the result of uneducated maoist propaganda and racist calling us names like that if we still under Americans you cant boss us around because we have F18s and F16s kicking you arrogant SOBs back to hell just how we kick you sorry behinds in battle of yultong and Erie hill.
Are you dreaming? F-16 and F-18. PHILIPPINE under Aquino is famous for incompetence. We use our J-7 is enough to take down whatever you have. :lol:
 
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Wow really this is why people hate you guys



Ya you forget too that moro killed Christians too same way and people would do the same to them its eye for an eye war back then but no its different its just kidnapping and minor skirmishes the Malaysians did fund and train them but in the end the same people turn on them too. The Point is people learn now that if they wanna prosper there must be peace and its on its way but people are uneasy simply because of past history everyone is to blame for this conflict its simply the Government or the moros or even the Malaysians its everyone because people its that simple


Who starting the whole mess when Misuari is just your another lecturer back in 1967? Marcos Government, why because they wanna use Moro SpecOps to conduct infiltration against Malaysia, and amid fear of nothing, Marcos government Suddenly killing all of 60 Moro's who in training in cold blooded massacre.

The Philippine government encouraged Filipino Christian settlers in Mindanao to form militias called Ilaga to fight the Moros. The Ilaga engaged in massacres and atrocities and were responsible for Manili Massacree of 65 Moro Muslim civilians in a Mosque on June 1971, including women and children. The Ilaga also engaged in cannibalism, cutting off the body parts of their victims to eat in rituals. The Ilaga settlers were given the sarcastic nickname as an acronym, the "Ilonggo Land Grabbers’ Association"

look here PH south’s separatist, armed groups « The PCIJ Blog

Look another Pinoy massacre against Muslim Population, do you think any people would stand idle just to watching some rampage massacre happened around them? What your government did is Genocide war against Moros

In 1969, the MNLF waged armed conflict against the your Government. During one of the fierce battles of the insurgency in 1974, Jolo was burned down and another large scale massacre happened and news of the tragedy galvanized other Muslims around the world to pay greater attention to the conflict. Over 10,000 Moro and Chinese civilians were killed by the Philippine Armed Forces when they burned Jolo to the ground.

Other massacres committed by the Philippine armed forces against Moro civilians include the November 1971 Tacub Massacre, 1974 Malisbong Massacre, October 1977 Patikul Massacre, February 1981 Pata Island Massacre.

On 24 September 1974, in the Malisbong Massacre the Armed Forces of Philippine slaughtered about 1,500 Moro Muslim civilians who were praying at a Mosque in addition to mass raping Moro girls who had been taken aboard a boat

The Moros carried out their insurgency war against Philippine government is as their only choice instead of being massacred cold blooded by the glorious AFP.

@Nihonjin1051 that's what your so called friendly Philippine government did against their own people, the true terrorist in this case is Philippine Government

Oh my god just stop seriously nobody likes you people here this reply of yours simply the result of uneducated maoist propaganda and racist calling us names like that if we still under Americans you cant boss us around because we have F18s and F16s kicking you arrogant SOBs back to hell just how we kick you sorry behinds in battle of yultong and Erie hill.

What the ****, Philippine have F-16 and F-18

You must got a good weed here
 
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Not really

Stop replying, NOW. It seems that in this forum, the PH government is evil while other countries' governments are innocent.

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Sure the PH government have made a lot of mistakes, even committing massacres, but this doesn't mean that the PH government is the only national government in this god-forsaken planet that is committing such acts; they only see the PH government's mistakes while turning a blind eye on their own government's treatment of minority/other ethnic groups in their own country.

The casus belli of the current southern insurgency by the Moro may have began in the '70s, but the issue had been around longer; it started during the Spanish colonial era.
 
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Stop replying, NOW. It seems that in this forum, the PH government is evil while other countries' governments are innocent.

-----

Sure the PH government have made a lot of mistakes, even committing massacres, but this doesn't mean that the PH government is the only national government in this god-forsaken planet that is committing such acts; they only see the PH government's mistakes while turning a blind eye on their own government's treatment of minority/other ethnic groups in their own country.

The casus belli of the current southern insurgency by the Moro may have began in the '70s, but the issue had been around longer; it started during the Spanish colonial era.

no one called my own or other country innocents, but at least we don't hide anything. We called genocide against Communist, we called genocide against Timor Lestean people, we called war against Papuan rebels, but we don't hide them. What your government did is more disgusting, blaming everything on others, calling Malaysian is training the Moros, calling Russian backing the NAP and doesn't recall their inept attitudes and their in-capabilities to handle the jobs properly.

Heck why the conflict in Moros still happened till today at large scale? because many Pinoys getting benefit from this conflict. AFP seen this conflict as their cards against politician in Malacanang, many senates see this conflict as their cards to own their local army (hiring bodyguards) to intimidate other politician, many lowly ranks soldier see this conflict as their opportunity to getting promotion, and the President himself is several times using this conflict for their own gain. Estrada using his total war against Moro as the chance to changing people attention from his corruption cases. Arroyo using Moro conflict as her opportunity to increasing her popularity among masses and so on.

Your government did the massacre and accusing the Moro people as terrorist, and that's it what a disgusting way to hide your crimes
 
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Who starting the whole mess when Misuari is just your another lecturer back in 1967? Marcos Government, why because they wanna use Moro SpecOps to conduct infiltration against Malaysia, and amid fear of nothing, Marcos government Suddenly killing all of 60 Moro's who in training in cold blooded massacre.

The Philippine government encouraged Filipino Christian settlers in Mindanao to form militias called Ilaga to fight the Moros. The Ilaga engaged in massacres and atrocities and were responsible for Manili Massacree of 65 Moro Muslim civilians in a Mosque on June 1971, including women and children. The Ilaga also engaged in cannibalism, cutting off the body parts of their victims to eat in rituals. The Ilaga settlers were given the sarcastic nickname as an acronym, the "Ilonggo Land Grabbers’ Association"

look here PH south’s separatist, armed groups « The PCIJ Blog

Look another Pinoy massacre against Muslim Population, do you think any people would stand idle just to watching some rampage massacre happened around them? What your government did is Genocide war against Moros

In 1969, the MNLF waged armed conflict against the your Government. During one of the fierce battles of the insurgency in 1974, Jolo was burned down and another large scale massacre happened and news of the tragedy galvanized other Muslims around the world to pay greater attention to the conflict. Over 10,000 Moro and Chinese civilians were killed by the Philippine Armed Forces when they burned Jolo to the ground.

Other massacres committed by the Philippine armed forces against Moro civilians include the November 1971 Tacub Massacre, 1974 Malisbong Massacre, October 1977 Patikul Massacre, February 1981 Pata Island Massacre.

On 24 September 1974, in the Malisbong Massacre the Armed Forces of Philippine slaughtered about 1,500 Moro Muslim civilians who were praying at a Mosque in addition to mass raping Moro girls who had been taken aboard a boat

The Moros carried out their insurgency war against Philippine government is as their only choice instead of being massacred cold blooded by the glorious AFP.

@Nihonjin1051 that's what your so called friendly Philippine government did against their own people, the true terrorist in this case is Philippine Government



What the ****, Philippine have F-16 and F-18

You must got a good weed here

Dude i was screwing with the SOB
 
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thanks god, Philippine Army is in such sorry state

with their immaturity and childish acts maybe when they get stronger Philippine people will be trigger happy and even calling war against their neighbor especially Indonesia and Malaysia.
 
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Stop replying, NOW. It seems that in this forum, the PH government is evil while other countries' governments are innocent.

-----

Sure the PH government have made a lot of mistakes, even committing massacres, but this doesn't mean that the PH government is the only national government in this god-forsaken planet that is committing such acts; they only see the PH government's mistakes while turning a blind eye on their own government's treatment of minority/other ethnic groups in their own country.

The casus belli of the current southern insurgency by the Moro may have began in the '70s, but the issue had been around longer; it started during the Spanish colonial era.

Tama rin baka hindi nila alam kung ginawa rin sariling nila mga goberino mahina kasi tayo hindi na nga post back sa gag0 kasi gagohan lng naman anyhow let be lets wait for congress
 
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Tama rin baka hindi nila alam kung ginawa rin sariling nila mga goberino mahina kasi tayo hindi na nga post back sa gag0 kasi gagohan lng naman anyhow let be lets wait for congress

can't speaking English properly huh?

I though Pinoy always proud for their proficiency in using english
 
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