Moro fronts, Malacañang strengthen peace overtures over ‘iftar’
John Unson – Philstar.com April 4, 2024 | 6:50pm Representatives of Malacañang and leaders of the Moro National Liberation Front flash the peace sign after a dialogue that preceded their `iftar’ banquet in an MNLF camp in Datu Odin Sinsuat, Maguindanao del Norte on April 2, 2024. Photo courtesy of Philstar.com / John Unson COTABATO […]
John Unson – Philstar.com
April 4, 2024 | 6:50pm
Representatives of Malacañang and leaders of the Moro National Liberation Front flash the peace sign after a dialogue that preceded their `iftar’ banquet in an MNLF camp in Datu Odin Sinsuat, Maguindanao del Norte on April 2, 2024.
Photo courtesy of Philstar.com / John Unson
COTABATO CITY — Leaders of two Moro fronts that have separate compacts with Malacañang and representatives of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. broke bread and dined together in separate iftar banquets where they agreed to continue pushing the Mindanao peace process forward.
Iftar is the first meal after a daylong fast from food and drinks during the Islamic Ramadhan season, which started on March 12 and may possibly end by the second week of April based on the lunar Hijrah calendar.
Representatives of the Moro National Liberation Front, led by the chairman of its central committee, Bangsamoro Regional Labor Minister Muslimin Sema, Presidential Adviser on Peace Reconciliation and Unity Carlito Galvez Jr. and other state officials exchanged pledges to nurture the dividends of the Sept. 2, 1996 government-MNLF peace accord during an iftar gathering in Barangay Bago Enged, Datu Odin Sinsuat town in Maguindanao del Norte on Tuesday.
“That was a very cordial gathering, something so essential to the joint peace initiatives of the MNLF and the national government,” Sema said on Thursday.
The MNLF and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, whose figurehead, Ahod Balawag Ebrahim, is an appointed chief minister of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, are managing the now four-year BARMM government, a product of two decades of peace talks between the government and the MILF.
The MNLF also has representatives in the 80-seat interim BARMM parliament besides those at the helm of other ministries and support agencies under Ebrahim’s office.
Galvez said he was impressed by the cordiality of Sema and other MNLF officials who treated him like a family member and not an outside guest during their iftar gathering in Camp Ebrahim Sema in Barangay Bago Enged.
“I deeply felt their commitment to keep the Mindanao peace process going and their zeal to sustain the gains of the peace agreement between the government and the Moro National Liberation Front,” Galvez told reporters here on Thursday morning.
Galvez and his companions also dined together with MILF officials, led by Ebrahim, in a separate iftar engagement on Wednesday in Barangay Gambar in Kabuntalan, Maguindanao del Norte.
Peace talks between the government and the MILF began Jan. 7, 1997 and ended on March 27, 2014 with the crafting by both sides of the Comprehensive Agreement on Bangsamoro that paved the way for the replacement in 2019 via a referendum of the then 27-year Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao with a more empowered BARMM.
Ebrahim and two senior members of the MILF’s central committee, Abdulrauf Macacua, who is governor of Maguindanao del Norte province and BARMM Education Minister Muhaquer Iqbal, separately assured Galvez of their group’s religious compliance with its peace accord with Malacañang during the iftar event in Barangay Gambar.
“Our two separate iftar activities with leaders of the MILF and the MNLF were both very fruitful,” Galvez said.