Newsletter
No. 341
Information-Announcement
July 25, 2006
Just
before his trip to Bangladesh, Foreign Minister Taro Aso stopped
in Manila. He expressed Tokyo’s interest in joining the
International Monitoring Team for the peace process in Mindanao.
Japan will become the first non-Muslim country to get involved,
and will be partnered with Brunei, Libya, and Malaysia in this
operation.
JAPAN TAKES A MORE ACTIVE ROLE IN THE MINDANAO PEACE
PROCESS
July 23, 2006
Japan's
Foreign Minister Taro Aso held bilateral meetings today with
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Foreign Secretary Alberto
Romulo. Minister Aso is in Manila for "Philippines-Japan
Friendship Day" to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
the normalization of diplomatic relations between the Philippines
and Japan. During the meetings, Minister Aso informed President
Arroyo and Secretary Romulo of Japan's decision to dispatch
a development expert to the International Monitoring Team (IMT)
and of other new Japanese initiatives in regard to the Mindanao
Peace Process. He also conveyed to them Japan's desire to contribute
more actively to the peace process by assisting those living
in conflict-affected areas who have endured many hardships brought
about by a protracted conflict and, through these new initiatives,
enabling them to achieve a lasting peace in Mindanao. President
Arroyo and Secretary Romulo welcomed Japan's move to play a
more active role in the Mindanao Peace Process and expressed
their appreciation for the said initiatives.
DISPATCH
OF A DEVELOPMENT EXPERT TO THE IMT
The
IMT -- composed of Malaysia, Brunei, and Libya -- has been operating
in Mindanao since October 2004, after the Government of the
Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the Moro Islamic Liberation
Front (MILF) signed the ceasefire agreement in July 2003. Owing
to the IMT's presence, the peace and order situation in the
conflict-affected areas has dramatically improved. Under these
circumstances, the GRP and the MILF formally invited Japan to
dispatch an expert who can play a leading role in "socio-economic
monitoring," which is one of the IMT's two important pillars,
the other being "ceasefire monitoring." The expert
to be dispatched shall hold office in Cotabato City where IMT's
headquarters is located and is expected to monitor the rehabilitation
and economic development situation in the MILF conflict-affected
areas, and likewise take an active role in the formulation and
implementation of a comprehensive economic development plan
for the area.
ESTABLISHMENT
OF THE MINDANAO TASK FORCE
Having
decided to dispatch a development expert to the IMT, the Government
of Japan instructed the Embassy of Japan in the Philippines,
the JICA, and the JBIC to set up a "Mindanao Task Force"
that would fully support the said expert and ensure that the
latter accomplishes his duties efficiently. The Task Force --
together with the said expert and in close cooperation with
the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process
(OPAPP) and the Bangsamoro Development Agency (BDA) -- will
formulate a development plan for the area, and coordinate with
concerned groups and agencies for the effective implementation
of projects such as the "Grant Assistance For Grassroots
Human Security Projects" (GGP), Grant Aid, Technical Cooperation,
and Yen Loan in such a way that those projects will help bring
peace to the entire Mindanao region.
CONCENTRATION
OF ASSISTANCE PROJECTS IN CENTRAL MINDANAO
Japan
decided to implement the "Grant Assistance For Grassroots
Human Security Projects" by focusing on regional development
projects, entrusting that responsibility to the Mindanao Task
Force. It is aimed at ensuring that the projects will directly
benefit the people at the grassroots level and enable them to
experience the "dividends of peace" through such undertakings
as the construction of school classrooms, vocational training
centers, water supply systems, and health care centers in the
MILF conflict-affected areas of Central Mindanao. Japan seeks
to implement more than ten (10) projects within a year in the
area. Prior to the decision, the Embassy of Japan sent a research
mission to Cotabato City in June this year and held a briefing
session to explain GGP schemes to local stakeholders. The Embassy
is now in the process of formulating projects for the local
NGOs and schools in cooperation with the OPAPP and the BDA.
These GGP initiatives to BDA are very unique and epoch-making
ones since Japan is considered as the first foreign country
to extend these kind of substantial assistance where the grassroots
people can feel the "dividend of peace" through BDA
which is the inner agency in charge of rehabilitation and development
of MILF, one of the rebel groups, even before the final peace
agreement is signed between GRP and MILF.
REFERENCE
International
Monitoring Team (IMT)
With
a membership of about 60 people, the IMT has its headquarters
in Cotabato City while each of its five Team Sites is located
in the cities of Cotabato, Iligan, Zamboanga, General Santos,
and Davao. The IMT's jurisdiction covers 14 of Mindanao's 21
provinces.
Japan’s
Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects (GGP)
Japan
started its GGP in 1989. So far, it has carried out 367 projects
throughout the Philippines, of which 110 projects (or about
one-third of the total) are in Mindanao.
Assistance
to BDA
JICA
has started "Capacity Building Program for Peace Building
in Mindanao", the project to BDA, in cooperation with OPAPP,
in July this year.