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Good News: the Phillipines, Botswana, Cuba . . .

Whenever I find myself in doubt, I look for good news. Here’s some. And I remember these two simple rules, both from teacher/friends whom I treasure: 1. Assume good will. and 2. Everyone’s doing the best they can.

First, the Phillipines: let’s imagine this historic peace pact in one tiny corner of the world swirling outwards to infect other long-standing disputes with the courage of its peace-full intent.

Philippines, Muslim rebels sign historic peace pact


* President Aquino, MILF chief witnesses the signing of accord

* Rebel chief became first to visit presidential palace

* New autonomous region will have its own parliament

MANILA: Muslim rebels waging a four-decade insurgency in the Philippines signed a historic pact with the government on Monday to end the conflict, but both sides warned the road to peace had only just begun.

President Benigno Aquino and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) chief Murad Ebrahim witnessed the signing of the accord, which aims for a final peace pact by 2016, in a ceremony at the presidential palace in Manila. “I come in peace and to forge a partnership of peace on the basis of the framework agreement between the MILF and the Philippine government,” Ebrahim said in a speech during the ceremony. “We extend the hand of friendship and partnership to the president and Filipino people”.

Aquino, who has driven the process since assuming office in 2010, also hailed the agreement as a chance to “finally achieve genuine, lasting peace”. Ebrahim became the first MILF chief to visit the presidential palace, signifying the optimism from both sides about finally ending a conflict that has claimed 150,000 lives and the priority Aquino has put on achieving peace.

Under the plan, the 12,000-strong MILF would give up its quest for an independent homeland in the southern region of Mindanao in return for significant power and wealth-sharing in a new autonomous region there. However the MILF’s leadership, the government and independent observers have all warned the path towards peace remains littered with obstacles, and that Monday’s signing does not guarantee an end to the conflict.

“As the saying goes, the devil is in the details. Much work remains to be done in order to fully reap the fruits of this framework agreement,” Aquino said in his speech just before the signing by both sides’ chief negotiators. The MILF’s chief negotiator, Mohagher Iqbal, expressed similar caution in a press conference after the signing. “With all the intensity, emotional attachment and substantive agreement, it is still a piece of paper. It will not implement itself,” Iqbal said as he warned of tough negotiations ahead.

Muslim rebel groups have been fighting since the 1970s for full independence or autonomy in Mindanao, which they consider their ancestral homeland from before Spanish Christian colonisation of the country began in the 1500s. The MILF is the biggest and most important remaining rebel group, after the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) signed a peace deal with the government in 1996.

That deal led to an autonomous region in Mindanao but Aquino described it last week as a “failed experiment” because of massive corruption and worsening poverty there. The planned new autonomous region would replace the old one, covering much of the same area but with more powers for self-rule. The new autonomous region would have its own parliament and ability to tax its residents, while Islamic Shariah law would apply to Muslims in civil cases. Some of the MNLF’s leaders have voiced anger at seeing their power base dissolve, and have warned they may be prepared to take up arms again.

Fresh attacks by the MNLF or small Islamic groups who still want independence are among the potential obstacles to the peace process. Another is potential opposition from Catholic politicians and business leaders. afp

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Next Botswana, where women can now climb out of their “binders.”

African mother baby-by UNFPA Sawiche Wamunza

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Botswana High Court overturned a customary law which prevented women from inheriting the family home, calling it “an unacceptable system of male dominati… (Read more)

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And, whew! — Cuba!

Cuba to Ease Hated Travel Restrictions

Cuba will scrap much-reviled travel restrictions starting in January, making it easier for its citizens to leave the communist-ruled island in the first major reform to its migration policies in half a century. The changes reverse tough restrictions imposed in 1961 when the government . . .(Read more)

Now let’s make that an equal, even exchange. Easy travel from and to Cuba, an island nation from which we have so much to learn. Remember: Cuba went through “Peak Oil” back in the early ’90s, when the Soviet spigots stopped flowing and they had to learn how (remember how) to grow food in their cities. My sudden awakening to the need for community gardens (see ganggarden.wordpress.com) came from watching The Power of Community, about Cuba’s experience during and after that sudden chaotic crisis.

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