Countries and issues
>> Friday, September 18, 2015
COMMENTARY
Bernie
V. Lopez
Philippines. The controversial Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), which aims to give
vast powers to the rebel group Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), is less
about peace and more about politics. Lately, a lot of pro-BBL articles and
videos have been coming out in the media.
There is reason to believe there
is massive funding behind this PR drive, which may come only from two possible
sources. First are Christian and Muslim power politicians in partnership in
Mindanao, seeking Muslim votes in the coming elections, in return for
facilitating the passage of the BBL. Second are foreign groups, such as
Malaysia, which has been exposed in several breakfast forums lately to have
been reportedly supporting the MILF with arms and funds, whose purpose is to
distract and dilute the government’s focus on the Sabah issue.
The BBL will legitimize, fund and
arm the already overarmed MILF, some of whose members have been accused of
murder in relation to the infamous Mamasapano encounter of 44 soldiers of the
police Special Action Force (SAF). The MILF has also stolen the arms of the SAF
victims, promised to return them, but never did. MILF mobile arms factories
have also been discovered in remote forests, that is why they are overarmed.
Past gestures of media-covered
surrender of arms involved rusty obsolete rifles. An MILF spokesperson in fact
said the MILF will never surrender their arms, making the BBL and the peace
talks a sham. There will never be peace if rebels are allowed to keep their
arms, much less arm them. The BBL is a pet project of President Aquino because
he truly believes it will bring peace in Mindanao, which will be his legacy in
history. Yet the BBL may be the agent for war rather than peace if we appease
and arm rebels whose sincerity is being questioned.
***
China. When China’s economy achieved rapid growth, most of the Western
mining companies which supplied China with industrial resources had an
unprecedented boom. Now that China’s economy is starting to taper off, these
mining companies are experiencing losses, as articulated by super-giant
Glencore. The same story is true for other corporations trading with China. The
decline or collapse of the China economy may trigger the same of the global
economy, starting with the US, the biggest trading partner of China.
To prevent this, China is in a
frenzy to occupy and conduct oil explorations in the 3 million-hectare South
China Sea, because the biggest factor in its economic decline is the lack of
energy to fuel its industrial growth. This involves militarization to protect
their oil fields from other claimants. China is even willing to risk a war with
the US just to achieve these needed economic inputs. China’s brazen occupation
and militarization of the Spratlys have two goals in mind, to get much needed
oil, and to contain the “encirclement” efforts of Barack Obama’s pivot to Asia.
For the prophets of doom, there are only two alternatives in the long term,
global economic collapse or a China-US war in the South China Sea.
***
Nigeria. The Boko Haram militants are currently conducting systematic
massacres in northern Nigeria, which is their turf. Close to 1,000 have been
reported killed in four months since President MuhammaduBuhari took over last
May, according to the BBC.
Boko Haram is a monster created
by an extremely corrupt government in partnership with greedy oil
multinationals. For the last three decades, the government has been living in
luxury, not extending help to the poor in the north, developing its affluence
in the south shores where all the oil flows out to the West. Ironically, the
oil fields are in the north. They have left the sources of the wealth destitute
in their greed and corruption.
The Western oil multinationals,
which are equally guilty, turn a blind eye to the corruption in the government,
as long as they get their pound of flesh for the enrichment of Western nations.
The multinationals have no reason to disrupt their windfall with such social
issues, which they perceive to be local problems, not their business. But in
truth, they are guilty of the sin of omission in participating in the
systematic impoverishment of the poor.
The government is intent in
quelling the Boko Haram rebellion, not even conscious that they created that
monster. The multinationals have no guilt. They are only after the oil, which
has drawn the blood of Nigerians on a massive scale in the last three decades
of extraction without development. In truth, the multinationals, if they wanted
to, can pressure the government to attend to the poor to achieve long-term
stability. But they refuse to rock the boat and risk their windfall falling
into rivals’ hands.
Bernie V. Lopez is a frequent
contributor, a radio-TV broadcaster, a documentary producer-director and a
former Ateneo professor (eastwindreplyctr@gmail.com).
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