CAMP
MELCHOR DELA CRUZ, Gamu, Isabela — Some 168 former armed rebels of three
Cordillera Peoples Liberation Army were integrated into the Armed Forces of the
Philippines Tuesday -- the last of CPLA
forces, according to the military here.
“This is the end. It is the final closure,” said Mayor Gabino Ganggangan of
Sadanga, Mountain Province, also the secretary general of the CPLA’s Cordillera
Bodong Administration (CBA), at simple rights at this camp in Gamu town.
Marcelina Bahatan, chairman of the CBA and
Major General Lysander Surte, commander of the 5th Infantry Division (5th ID),
signed a document titled “Joint Declaration on the Successful Completion” which
would formally end the clamor for integration of the CPLA.
“There can longer be a CPLA because the
government has already made good its promise to integrate our members into the
AFP,” added the former rebel leader.
He cited the realization of the government’s
commitment to the region as contained in Executive Order 220 issued during the
term of President Corazon Aquino.
The EO220 was issued by the late former
president to prepare for the creation of the Cordillera autonomous region.
Ganggangan said that the government has already complied with its commitment and
they are thankful for that.
Yesterday, a total of 168 former CPLA
members, the last of their kind, have been integrated. Among them are 62 former
armed fighters from Kalinga; 52 from Mountain Province; 29 from Abra; 17 from
Apayao; four from Benguet; and four from Ifugao.
This brings to 1,564 the total number of
former CPLA members who are now formally with the country’s armed forces. There
are 49 who became officers; 661 enlisted personnel; and 888 Civilian Armed
Forces Geographical Unit Auxiliary Group (CAFGU-CAA).
Aside from integration, a total of 511 from
CPLA were employed as forest guards in the different provinces of Cordillera
and a total of 915 peoples’ organization were established for their livelihood
program.
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