Bangsamoro
agreement opens up Mindanao’s fertile lands
March 27, 2014 10:02 pm
by Joel M. Sy Egco Senior Reporter
& Llanesca T. Panti
Moro Islamic Liberation Front rebels
shout “Allah akbar” (God is great) inside their camp in Sultan Kudarat during a
rally in support of the peace agreement on Thursday. AFP PHOTO
Implementation of the Comprehensive
Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) will open up “vast fertile lands” in Mindanao
to development projects that will eventually boost the entire country’s
economy, Presidential Communications Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. said on
Thursday.
“Mindanao constitutes a very big
part of the nation. Can you imagine a situation where we are able to open up
the entire Philippines including places like Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Maguindanao?
Those of you [who] were at the Sajahatra Bangsamoro launch last year, we
recalled that we saw vast stretches of very fertile land,” the Palace official
told reporters hours before the formal signing of the CAB.
Coloma said cessation of hostilities
and promise of enduring peace will foster growth in the regions covered by the
new Bangsamoro political entity.
“If we can only increase the
productivity of Mindanao, if we can only increase significantly the gross
domestic product of the regions covered by this agreement, that would be a
tremendous boost to the entire country,” he pointed out.
Previously, the National Economic
and Development Authority (Neda) said Mindanao may even surpass the growth of
Luzon under an environment of peace. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio
Balisacan, also Neda director-general, said maximizing Mindanao’s economic
potential through a Bangsamoro economic plan will provide a stronger boost for
the entire economy.
According to Coloma, all Filipinos,
not only the people of Mindanao, are stakeholders in the peace process because
its long-term benefits will redound to the good of all.
“Not only those in Mindanao but all
Filipinos are important stakeholders in establishing enduring peace through
this Bangsamoro agreement,” the Palace official said.
“And we are determined to carry out
all the necessary efforts to make this peace an enduring legacy way beyond June
30, 2016,” he added. On this date, a successor to President Benigno Aquino 3rd
will have taken his or her oath to lead the country until 2012.
“It is important that we get the
widest and deepest support of the entire nation, not only [that of] our
brothers in Mindanao,” Coloma said.
The Makati Business Club, one of the
country’s influential business groups, also on Thursday said effective
implementation of the peace deal will unleash the full economic potential of
Mindanao.
The group added that the CAB
presents a “golden opportunity” for Mindanao, particularly in agriculture and
agribusiness investments, tourism and natural-resource development.
It called on the private sector to
support the economic development of Mindanao and help provide more livelihood
opportunities for the people there.
”Indeed, it is only through coming
together as a people that the greatest of challenges can be confidently faced
and surpassed.
Let us build upon this landmark
achievement to bring forth a generation of peace and inclusive development in
Mindanao and in the other troubled areas of our country,” the MBC said.
Rep. Sherwin Gatchalian of Valenzuea
City, the vice chairman of the House Committee on Housing and Urban
Development, said foreign direct investments will pour into Mindanao once the
armed conflict there ends.
“Foreign investors need a peaceful
and business-friendly environment. The peace pact will guarantee that the
Bangsamoro will be a fertile ground for much-needed investments,” Gatchalian
pointed out.
Poverty incidence in 2012 the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which will fall under the jurisdiction of
the Bangsamoro, was pegged at 48.7 percent, making it the region with the
highest poverty incidence in the country.
For Rep. Carlos Zarate of Bayan Muna
party-list, the work is just getting started.
“In fact, the signing of this new
agreement will embolden the Moro people to be more vigilant of their rights.
While a new law is yet to be passed by Congress, we have to be on the lookout
[for] attempts to place the future of the Bangsamoro in the hands of people who
will profit greedily from further liberalization of our economy and
privatization of our basic services,” Zarate, a lawyer, said.
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