Published: 8:41PM Friday May 02, 2008
Source: Reuters
Muslim rebels have forced hundreds of mainly Christian families
off their farms in the southern Philippines, escalating tensions in
the region ahead of the withdrawal of Malaysian peace monitors next
week.
Rolando Garcia, mayor of Kalamansig town on the troubled southern
island of Mindanao, said that heavily-armed members of the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) claimed the farmers' land belonged
to the Muslim minority.
"We have about 1,200 people in our temporary shelter areas...afraid
to return to their farms," Garcia told reporters, adding rice was
about to be harvested when the rebels came late on Wednesday.
The 11,000-strong MILF is meant to be observing a ceasefire and a
spokesman for the rebel group said he was unaware of any land
seizures.
"We have not received any report on that," Eid Kabalu told
reporters, adding the MILF leadership has ordered units to abide by
a 2003 truce even after the Malaysian peace monitors
withdraw.
Some MILF members are frustrated that long-running peace talks with
Manila for the creation of a homeland for Muslims in the south of
the largely Catholic country have been stalled since December
2007.
Last week, Malaysia said around 20 of 41 peacekeepers would leave
on May 10 and the rest will be withdrawn by the end of August
because the peace process, which Kuala Lumpur was chairing, was not
moving fast enough.
Garcia said many Christian communities in the south feared of
similar MILF attacks on their farms and villages as frustration
boils over.
But analysts have said they do not expect the ceasefire to break
down because most MILF members are war weary after a near 40-year
conflict that has killed 120,000 people and displaced two
million.
The MILF has questioned the sincerity of the government in wanting
to create a Muslim homeland in the south.
Although President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo has repeatedly said she
wants peace, hawks in her cabinet are opposed to giving large
swathes of land to Muslims and politically powerful Christian clans
in the south would oppose a deal.
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