Japan plans $3 M projects in Mindanao
March 2, 2007 | 12:00am
Japan’s development agency plans to carry out $3 million worth of social and economic projects in conflict areas in the Mindanao in the next two years, an embassy official said yesterday.
The aid is aimed at helping push Muslim rebels sign a peace deal with the government, Taeko Takahashi, an official at the Japanese embassy, told Reuters.
Last year, Japan agreed to make a study and draw up a comprehensive economic plan to develop poor Muslim communities ravaged by about 40 years of separatist rebellion on the troubled southern island of Mindanao.
"The agreement at small livelihood projects, including the building of village roads, water systems, clinics and educational facilities. We still have no idea how many projects would be done because it would depend on the actual needs on the ground."
Representatives from Japan’s International Cooperation Agency (JICA) were due to sign an agreement with the Manila government on Friday to formalise Tokyo’s development assistance.
Takahashi said a team of Japanese development experts has started initial work, talking to residents in conflict areas to find out the communities’ development needs. The JICA team worked as part of the Malaysian-led International Monitoring contingent.
Since 2004, a 60-member monitoring team from Malaysia, Brunei and Libya has been deployed in Mindanao to sustain the July 2003 truce between security forces and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, the largest Muslim rebel group in the south.
The rebels welcomed Japan’s effort to move the peace process forward, saying the economic assistance would complement ongoing peace negotiations, brokered by Malaysia since 2001, to end a conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people.
"We can only build and nurture the belief and confidence of the people in the peace process by way of implementing relief, rehabilitation and development programs while the peace negotiation is ongoing," said MILF leader Ebrahim Murad in a statement posted on the rebels’ Website www.luwaran.com.
Murad, who rose to head the 12,000-member rebel forces in 2003 after the death of MILF founder Salamat Hashim, said the group had learned from the an earlier peace deal between the government and the rival Moro National Liberation Front.
He said the Muslim people were frustrated because most of the development assistance promised by government and foreign donors was never delivered after the MNLF signed a deal in 1996.
The aid is aimed at helping push Muslim rebels sign a peace deal with the government, Taeko Takahashi, an official at the Japanese embassy, told Reuters.
Last year, Japan agreed to make a study and draw up a comprehensive economic plan to develop poor Muslim communities ravaged by about 40 years of separatist rebellion on the troubled southern island of Mindanao.
"The agreement at small livelihood projects, including the building of village roads, water systems, clinics and educational facilities. We still have no idea how many projects would be done because it would depend on the actual needs on the ground."
Representatives from Japan’s International Cooperation Agency (JICA) were due to sign an agreement with the Manila government on Friday to formalise Tokyo’s development assistance.
Takahashi said a team of Japanese development experts has started initial work, talking to residents in conflict areas to find out the communities’ development needs. The JICA team worked as part of the Malaysian-led International Monitoring contingent.
Since 2004, a 60-member monitoring team from Malaysia, Brunei and Libya has been deployed in Mindanao to sustain the July 2003 truce between security forces and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, the largest Muslim rebel group in the south.
The rebels welcomed Japan’s effort to move the peace process forward, saying the economic assistance would complement ongoing peace negotiations, brokered by Malaysia since 2001, to end a conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people.
"We can only build and nurture the belief and confidence of the people in the peace process by way of implementing relief, rehabilitation and development programs while the peace negotiation is ongoing," said MILF leader Ebrahim Murad in a statement posted on the rebels’ Website www.luwaran.com.
Murad, who rose to head the 12,000-member rebel forces in 2003 after the death of MILF founder Salamat Hashim, said the group had learned from the an earlier peace deal between the government and the rival Moro National Liberation Front.
He said the Muslim people were frustrated because most of the development assistance promised by government and foreign donors was never delivered after the MNLF signed a deal in 1996.
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