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Muslim separatism in the Philippines:
Meaningful autonomy or endless war?
By Thomas M. McKenna
Constitutional Reform and the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao
It was only with the removal of Ferdinand Marcos from office in 1986
and his replacement by Corazon Aquino that Philippine Muslims saw any
possibility for a genuine implementation of the Tripoli agreement and
the establishment of a single Muslim autonomous region covering all the
traditionally Muslim areas of the South. Their hopes were raised by the
resumption of peace talks between the Philippine government and the MNLF
and the drafting of a new Philippine Constitution in 1987 that provided for
the creation of an autonomous region in Muslim Mindanao. They were dashed again
in 1989, however, with the passage of the enabling legislation that actually
established the single Muslim autonomous region. The formal autonomy that
had been won in a hard-fought war was recast by the Philippine Congress as
something granted to the Muslim minority by the Christian majority and implemented
by means of majority rule. The enabling legislation required ratification by
a plebiscite in each of the 13 provinces and nine cities included in original
autonomous areas described in the Tripoli agreement. Only those areas voting
in favor would be included in the new autonomous region. Because of the massive
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Christian in-migration of the previous 40 years, most of the affected provinces
and cities now had Christian majorities. The MNLF broke off peace negotiations
with the government over the majority-rule requirements of the organic act and
called for a boycott of the plebiscite. When the plebiscite was held only four
of the 13 provinces and no cities voted for inclusion in the Autonomous Region of
Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). That small number was not only the result of Christians
opting out of ARMM. Basilan and Marawi City, both majority Muslim areas, voted
against inclusion in ARMM primarily as a result of MNLF opposition to the plebiscite.
The new Muslim autonomous region was established in 1990. Despite the announced
goal of the new administration to create something more substantial than the
meaningless autonomy implemented by Ferdinand Marcos, the new autonomous region
looked very similar in size and structure to the former ones and still very far
away from the autonomy envisioned by the Muslim signatories to the Tripoli Agreement.
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