LEYTE LAWMAKER ASKED FOR ACCOUNTABILITY FROM THE OFFICE OF THE PEACE PROCESS
Dateline Kamuning
Leyte Rep. Richard Gomez has slammed the Office of the
Presidential Adviser on Peace, Reconciliation, and Unity (OPAPRU) over the lack
of transparency and accountability in the decommissioning of Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF) combatants.
Gomez, during Monday’s House briefing on the state of
the peace process and peace and order situation in the Bangsamoro Autonomous
Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), said the OPAPRU should have been more
eagle-eyed in ensuring that the government is not placed at a disadvantage in
the implementation of the normalization track of the peace agreement between
the government and the MILF.
“There should be accountability in the disbursement of
government funds. The government cannot just allocate and release funds without
being fully informed of who are the recipients of government support, without
knowing who have availed of the decommissioning program. It is our duty as lawmakers
and public leaders to scrutinize how public funds are spent and if such
expenditures are advantageous to the government,” the lawmaker said as he hit
OPAPRU after it admitted that it does not have a list of the combatants who
have given up their weapons and returned to the folds of the government.
The OPAPRU, during the briefing, told lawmakers it does
not have a copy of the list of decommissioned combatants, which it said was
prepared and vetted by the Independent Decommissioning Body (IDB) that was
created by the government and the MILF to oversee the process of
decommissioning of MILF forces and their weapons. The IDB is a key component of
the normalization structure in accordance with the Comprehensive Agreement on
the Bangsamoro.
The IDB told lawmakers that 24,844 out of the 40,000
targeted MILF combatants have so far been decommissioned, with 4,625 firearms
turned over to the government.
“It's surprising that even the basic process of having
a general list of the decommissioned combatant is missing. The government is
already spending hundreds of millions of pesos to improve the lives of the
combatants, but we do not even know who they are. It’s been years and we have
been spending so much money without identifying who these people are. There’s a
list but foreigners are holding the list… What is this?! It gives me the
suspicion that they are funding something,” Gomez said.
Gomez likewise questioned the lack of a strict
monitoring mechanism to ensure that those who have been “decommissioned” have not
abused the goodwill of the government.
“What is our way of monitoring these people? Paano natin masisiguro na hindi sila babalik
sa kampo nila, lalabanan uli ang gobyerno pagkatapos makuha ang benepisyo? How do you monitor these people? How sure are
you they will not go back (to being combatants) and fire against the
government? Where did IDB use the financial list? Is it for financial
assistance for livelihood? Or is it financial assistance to sustain small wars?
What? Let us know so we know. I’d like to know,” he said.
Gomez stressed that lawmakers cannot fully support the
government’s peace process programs without knowing who are benefiting from
them.
“If we in the government don’t know who these people
are, why should we continue supporting them? These are the questions that pop
up in my mind. That is the kind of process they do: Tayo sa gobyerno, bigay
lang tayo ng bigay ng tulong sa kanila, sa mga na-decommissioned. Pero hindi
natin alam sino sila. What is our monitoring mechanism to know where they are
now? Where are these people right now? Where are they living?” he added.
Comments