Philippines Project

Overview

Nonviolent Peaceforce was invited to Mindanao by local organizations working for peace and justice. Some of the organizations are formally involved in monitoring the ceasefire between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). 

NP deploys internationals to work with local peacekeepers, contribute to their safety, help to maintain ceasefires and advance the peace process.

Nonviolent Peaceforce Philippines Project objectives include:

  • Enhancing the work of local peace teams through its presence and by reporting to the outside world;
  • Contributing to the maintenance of the ceasefire(s) and working to prevent new violence;
  • Supporting human rights reporting mechanisms in remote conflict areas;
  • Assisting and connecting local and international advocacy groups;
  • Ensuring grassroots conflicts are resolved through dialogue at the local level and do not grow into larger crises.

NP International Civilian Peacekeepers (ICPs) and national staff consult with local partners in deciding priorities and activities as evolving situations demand. To ensure legitimacy and accountability of the NP project to local civil society, there is an Advisory Board of prominent peace activists.

Strategy

NP's strategy in Mindanao:

  • To enhance the scope and quality of locally based people’s organizations and peace/human rights advocates.
  • To reduce the incidence of violence in the vicinity of NP field sites through means of unarmed international civilian peacekeeping, thereby aiding in the maintenance of the ceasefire(s).
  • To support human rights reporting mechanisms in remote conflict areas and assist/connect local and international advocacy groups that work for peace with justice by responding to people’s grievances. 
  • To localize grassroots conflicts so that they are resolved through dialogue at the lowest level and do not snowball into larger crises. 
  • To provide conscious international presence by deploying international civilian peacekeepers in vulnerable areas to associate with partners from local civil society.
  • To offer protective accompaniment to individuals, groups or communities wedded to non-violent solutions but exposed to threats.
  • To provide neutral spaces and facilitation services to local peacemakers who attempt to resolve traditional (Rido) and non-traditional disputes carrying the potential of violence.
  • To facilitate mutual sharing, learning and training on nonviolent strategies with peacemakers and authorities dealing with the peace process.
  • To monitor violations of international humanitarian and human rights law, reporting them to relevant national and international agencies upon the consent of survivors. 
  • To interposition international civilian peacekeepers along with local peace volunteers and ceasefire monitors to boost the sanctity of buffer zones and zones of peace.

Background

The conflict in Mindanao began when a massive resettlement program of Christians from the island of Luzon caused conflicts around land distribution with the predominantly Muslim population on Mindanao. The main guerrilla group, the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), signed a peace treaty with the Philippine government (GRP) in 1996.

A referendum asked the municipalities and provinces with significant Muslim populations in Mindanao if they wished to join an Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) which had originated in 1990. Today, five provinces form the ARMM. They are Lanao del Sur and Maguindanao in Central Mindanao, and the islands Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi in Western Mindanao. Since the municipalities of some of these regions are predominantly Christian, some of the cities are not in ARMM, including Cotabato City, which is the headquarters of the ARMM.

MNLF leaders joined the government structures in Mindanao, mainly in the ARMM.  Twelve thousand MNLF soldiers were demobilized, with about 8,500 of them integrated into the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police.

The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which had officially split off from the MNLF in 1984, continued the fighting. The GRP and MILF officially entered into peace talks in 1997. Ceasefire agreements and peace negotiations with the MILF broke down several times. The last two all-out wars happened in 2000 and in early 2003. In March 2003, peace talks were resumed.

Peace Talks

Peace talks between the Government of the Republic of Philippines (GRP) and the Moro Islamic National Front (MILF) are facing a difficult task on the issue of ancestral domains. On the eve of the officially signing ceremony of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD), the Supreme Court of the Philippines issued a Temporary Restraining Order and barred the GRP to affix its signature on MOA-AD.  The cancellation of the ceremony led to the breakdown of the peace talks. A firefight erupted in August 2008 between the Armed Forces of the Philippines and three influential Base Commanders of the MILF. The GRP and MILF Peace talks were facilitated by the Malaysian who also led the International Monitoring Team. The Peace talks are suspended up to now although efforts are being made to resume. Since August 2008, firefights have been going on continuously, resulting in the displacements of thousands of families.

Violence in the South has been perpetrated by many more groups than MNLF and MILF, including other armed non-state actors (Pentagon in Central Mindanao, Abu Sayyaf, the South-East Asian Jemaah Islamiah etc.), Christian vigilante organizations, criminal gangs, and official and semi-official government agencies. Human rights organizations have counted large numbers of cases of extrajudicial killings in the Mindanao region of the Philippines. Family feuds with an ethos of revenge are also an important issue, especially in Muslim areas.

All together, between 600,000 and one million people have been internally displaced because of the conflicts, and 160,000 died (40,000 in the North, 120,000 in the South). Most of the internally displaced have now returned.

Field Reports

Field reports offer details and descriptions of the past and present work of the Nonviolent Peaceforce teams. Reports are produced monthly by the Country Directors and other staff on location with an NP field project.

May/June 2008

The latest round of negotiations between the Peace Panels of the Government Republic of Philippines (GRP) and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Malaysia broke the deadlock on contentious issue of ancestral domain and finally managed to settle the issue which was lingering on for more than three years. Now both parties are gearing up to resume the formal peace talks after an impasse of almost two years which could finally set the path to the signing of the Formal Peace Agreement between the GRP and MILF. 

April 2008

The stalled peace process between the GRP and MILF startled with the sudden decision of the Malaysian government to gradually pull out the Malaysian contingents from the International Monitoring Team (IMT). The Malaysian government as the main facilitators of the GRP- MILF peace process had been maintaining 41 IMT members from Malaysian Defense Forces and the rest of 19 IMT members have been from Brunei, Libya and Japan.

March 2008

Other than maintaining back channel negotiations, there is no credible advancement or breakthrough between the Government of the Philippines (GRP) and MILF to announce an official date of the recommencement of the adjourned formal peace talks or executive level talks between the Peace Panel representatives of the both sides.

February 2008

The killing incident of eight villagers in Barangay Ipil, Maimbung Sulu by the Armed Forces of Philippines rocked the depleting, uncertain and vulnerable political and security structures of Mindanao. The incident happened when pursuing a false lead the military conducted a rescue operation to find one of the kidnapped victims by the Abu Sayyaf group. In the end, the military operation resulted in the death of seven civilians (including women, men and children) and one army soldier who was on vacations with his family.

Outcome

NP's Mindanao project is currently undergoing significant expansion.  In 2008 we saw the fruits of negotiations between the European Commission and NP offices in Brussels and the Philippines, result in the first major grant for the Philippines program. The Belgian Foreign Ministry became the biggest single donor to NP with its support to both field sites, followed by Germany.

The work of NP was highlighted in two workshops in the Philippines in August 2009, during which key stakeholders in the Mindanao Peace Processes acknowledged that unarmed civilian peacekeeping is an improvement in monitoring and consolidating the ceasefire mechanism structures.

Among the ongoing improvements in the project are new field offices, a Liaison Office in Manila, and a doubling of the number of unarmed civilian peacekeepers.