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VOA常速英语:In Southern Philippines Insurgency, Locals Are No Strangers to Deadlocked Talks
In the Philippines, the government and the country’s largest Muslim rebel group have been trying to reach a peace deal through nearly 15 years of on-and-off talks. In recent months, there have been signs of hope.
The Moro Islamic Liberation Front has tempered its call for total independence and the government is offering them more autonomy. But the standoff continues in one of the longest-running insurgencies in the world, which is taking its toll on ordinary citizens.
At six o’clock, the Muslim call to prayer permeates the open windows of a building on the grounds of an Islamic school in Cotabato City.
Inside the building, a woman in her late 60’s recalls the first time she was forced to leave her home because of fighting between Muslim insurgents and the Philippine government.
Speaking in the Maguindanaoan dialect with the help of interpreters, “Auntie,” as she is nicknamed, says she became a widow in the 1970s when martial law was first declared under the Marcos government, to quash the separatist movement.
She says she can still remember during that time that they were living harmoniously, but during the conflict they had to leave it all behind. She says they left their water buffalos and cows and even their simple livelihood.
That was the start of bitter fighting that has deeply affected families in this part of the country.
The last big clash between government and the rebels in 2008, made “Auntie” an "internally displaced person." She is one of thousands of people forced from their homes during times of sporadic violence. Many like her can no longer keep track of how often they have fled during nearly four decades of fighting.
A World Bank study of the conflict in Muslim-majority Mindanao reported that by 2005, more than two million people had been displaced and more than 120-thousand people died from the conflict.
About 10 kilometers northeast of Cotabato City at the Moro Islamic Liberation Front’s Camp Darapanan, dozens of fighters salute their leader, Chairman Murad Ebrahim.
The chairman is holding a rare news briefing to highlight the most recent impasse between the MILF and the Philippine government. He summarizes what locals say this fight is about.
“They want to govern themselves," Ebrahim says. "They want to determine their political future. They want to determine their way of life. So this is the aspiration of the Bangsamoro people.”
VOA - Simone Orendain
The rebels coined the term “Bangsamoro” to include Muslims, indigenous peoples and settlers who live in the region.相关文章
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