Philippines and Muslim rebel group agree peace plan

Agreement between President Aquino and MILF calls for a new semi-autonomous Muslim area in the resource-rich southern Philippine region of Mindanao.

President Benigno Aquino announces the peace plan between the Philippine government and MILF to end decades long insurgency in the south of the country.
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MANILA // The Philippine government and the country's biggest Muslim rebel group announced today they have agreed a plan to end a decades-long separatist insurgency that has killed more than 150,000 people.

The agreement calls for a new semi-autonomous Muslim area in the resource-rich southern Philippine region of Mindanao, which the 12,000-strong Moro Islamic Liberation Front regards as its ancestral homeland.

"This framework agreement paves the way for a final and enduring peace in Mindanao," President Benigno Aquino said in a nationally televised address.

"It brings all former secessionist groups into the fold. No longer does the Moro Islamic Liberation Front aspire for a separate state."

The MILF hailed the breakthrough, which was achieved in the latest round of peace talks in Malaysia that ended on Saturday, as the "beginning of peace".

"We are happy and we thank the president for this," Ghazali Jaafar, the MILF vice chairman for political affairs, said.

While Mr Aquino did not say when the final peace pact would be achieved, Mr Jaafar said the two sides were aiming for the middle of 2016 when the president's term ends.

Both Mr Aquino and Mr Jaafar pointed to major obstacles that still needed to overcome before a final peace could be achieved.

Mr Aquino said a final agreement would have to be approved by a plebiscite.

Such approval is not certain in the mainly Roman Catholic country. A planned peace deal during previous president Gloria Arroyo's term crumbled in 2008 at the final moment amid intense domestic opposition.

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Mr Jaafar also emphasised the agreement reached over the weekend was just a "road map", and said there had been no deal yet on significant issues such as the extent of the territory to be included in the new semi-autonomous region.

Neither were details announced on when the MILF's men would lay down their arms.

There are roughly four million Muslims in Mindanao, which they see as their ancestral homeland dating back to Islamic sultanates established before Spanish Christians arrived in the 1500s.

After decades of Catholic immigration, Muslims are now a minority in Mindanao but they insist they should be allowed largely to govern the region themselves and control its riches.

Mindanao is home to vast untapped reserves of gold, copper and other minerals, as well as being one of the country's most important farming regions.

The MILF and other Muslim rebel groups have been fighting for independence or autonomy in Mindanao since the early 1970s.

The rebellion has claimed more than 150,000 lives, most in the 1970s when all-out war raged, and left large parts of Mindanao in deep poverty.

The MILF is the biggest and most important remaining rebel group, after the Moro National Liberation Front signed a peace pact with the government in 1996.

The MILF first began peace talks with the government in 1997. They fell apart when then-president Joseph Estrada declared an all-out war against the rebels in 1998.

Mrs Arroyo then brokered a ceasefire with the MILF in 2003 and began peace talks.

But after the 2008 peace deal fell apart, two MILF commanders led attacks on mainly Christian villages in Mindanao, with the unrest killing 400 people and displacing about 750,000 others.

Mr Aquino reinvigorated the peace process in August last year when he met MILF chairman Murad Ebrahim in Japan. Their encounter was the first ever face-to-face talks between a sitting president and a MILF leader.