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Bangsamoro

Bangsamoro, officially the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM; Filipino: Rehiyong Awtonomo ng Bangsamoro sa Muslim Mindanao; Arabic: منطقة بانجسامورو ذاتية الحكم, Minṭaqah Banjisāmūrū dhātiyyah al-ḥukm), is an autonomous region located in the southern Philippines.

Bangsamoro
باڠسامورو
Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao
Filipino: Rehiyong Awtonomo ng Bangsamoro sa Muslim Mindanao
Arabic: منطقة بانجسامورو ذاتية الحكم فى مسلمى مينداناو
Left to right, top to bottom: Bangsamoro Government Center; Bulingan Falls, Lamitan, Basilan; Panampangan Island, Sapa-sapa, Tawi-Tawi; Polloc Port, Parang, Maguindanao; Lanao Lake at Marawi City; and PC Hill, Cotabato City
Anthem: Bangsamoro Hymn
Location in the Philippines
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 7°13′N 124°15′E / 7.22°N 124.25°E / 7.22; 124.25Coordinates: 7°13′N 124°15′E / 7.22°N 124.25°E / 7.22; 124.25
CountryPhilippines
Island groupMindanao
Creation plebiscitecJanuary 21, 2019
TurnovercFebruary 26, 2019
Inauguration of governmentMarch 29, 2019
Regional centerCotabato City[1]
Government
 • TypeDevolved regional parliamentary government within a unitary presidential republic
 • BodyBangsamoro Transition Authority
 • Wa'līKhalipha Nando
 • Chief MinisterMurad Ebrahim
 • Deputy Chief MinistersAli Solaiman
(Deputy for the Mainland)
Albakil Jikiri
(Deputy for the Islands)
 • Speaker of the ParliamentPangalian Balindong
Population
 (2020 census)d
 • Total4,944,800
 • Households
832,908
DemonymBangsamoro
Time zoneUTC+08:00 (PST)
Provinces
Cities
Municipalities116
Barangays2,590 (including 63 in the special geographic area in Cotabato)
Legislative districts8
Languages
GDP (2021)284 billion
$5 billion[2]
Growth rate (7.5%)[2]
HDI 0.646 (Medium)
HDI rank17th in Philippines (2019)
Websitebangsamoro.gov.ph
^ In various local languages written in Jawi script

^ Two-part plebiscite held in two dates. The first part held on January 21, 2019, was for the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law, the charter legislation of the region while the second part was to determine the final possible expanded scope of the region's territory. January 21, 2019, is recognized as the "Bangsamoro Foundation Day" as per the Bangsamoro Administrative Code.[3]^ Effective dissolution of the predecessor autonomous region, Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) and turnover of governance to the interim body, Bangsamoro Transition Authority.

^ The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) used the scope of the former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao as its geographic reference for the 2020 census when it was released on July 7, 2021. Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were then not included its population count for Bangsamoro. Statistics for said localities were included in the PSA's count for Soccsksargen.[4][5] On November 9, 2021, as per PSA Board Resolution No. 13 Series of 2021, Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were included in its population count for Bangsamoro and removed from Soccsksargen.[6][7]

Replacing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), the BARMM was formed with the ratification of its basic law, the Bangsamoro Organic Law, following a two-part legally binding plebiscite in Western Mindanao held on January 21 and February 6, 2019. The ratification was confirmed a few days later on January 25 by the Commission on Elections (COMELEC).

The establishment of Bangsamoro was the culmination of several years of peace talks between the Philippine government and several autonomist groups; in particular the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which rejected the validity of the ARMM and called for the creation of a region with more powers devolved from the national government. A framework agreement known as the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro was negotiated between the Benigno Aquino III administration and the MILF in 2014. After continued negotiations and debates over certain provisions, the Congress of the Philippines created and ratified a basic law for the region, now referred to as the Bangsamoro Organic Law; the bill was signed into law by President Rodrigo Duterte on July 26, 2018. Despite questions on the region's constitutionality, as it would have adopted a parliamentary system in an area of a country with a presidential system of government, no judicial ruling was made against the organic law and consequently the COMELEC held two-part plebiscite: one by ARMM citizens determining whether to dissolve the ARMM and immediately replace it with the Bangsamoro and, following the victory of the yes vote on the first part,[8][9][10] and the second part taken by neighboring municipalities and barangays in the provinces of Lanao del Norte and Cotabato regarding their cession to the Bangsamoro region.[11][12][13][14] As a result of the second part of the plebiscite, 63 barangays of Cotabato province were handed over to the Bangsamoro government, adding to the autonomous region's territory.[15][11]

The Bangsamoro took the place of the ARMM as the only Muslim-majority autonomous region in the Philippines.[16] Currently in transition until 2025, the Bangsamoro government has been considered a testing ground for the wider debate on constitutional reform and federalism in the Philippines.

Etymology

The recently coined term Bangsamoro is derived from the Old Malay word bangsa ("race" or "nation") and Moro (the collective term for the various predominantly Muslim ethnic groups in the Philippines, from Spanish "Moors").[citation needed]

History

 
A view of Cotabato City as seen in February 2018

Early history and arrival of Islam

 
Approximate historical extent of the Muslim sultanates of Sulu, Maguindanao and Lanao

For the most part of Philippines' history, the region and most of Mindanao have been a separate territory, which enabled it to develop its own culture and identity. The westernmost and west-central areas have been the traditional homeland of Muslim Filipinos since the 15th century, even before the arrival of the Spanish, who began to colonize most of the Philippines in 1565. Majority of Mindanao was the homeland of indigenous Lumad groups, who were neither Christians nor Muslims.

Muslim missionaries arrived in Tawi-Tawi in 1380 and started the colonization of the area and the conversion of the native population to Islam. In 1457, the Sultanate of Sulu was founded, and not long after that, the sultanates of Maguindanao and Buayan were also established. At the time when most of the Philippines was under Spanish rule, these sultanates maintained their independence and regularly challenged Spanish domination of the Philippines by conducting raids on Spanish coastal towns in the north and repulsing repeated Spanish incursions in their territory. It was not until the last quarter of the 19th century that the Sultanate of Sulu formally recognized Spanish suzerainty, but these areas remained loosely controlled by the Spanish as their sovereignty was limited to military stations and garrisons and pockets of civilian settlements in Zamboanga and Cotabato,[17] until they had to abandon the region as a consequence of their defeat in the Spanish–American War.

Spanish colonial era

The Moros had a history of resistance against Spanish, American, and Japanese rule for over 400 years. The violent armed struggle against the Japanese, Filipinos, Spanish, and Americans is considered by modern Moro Muslim leaders as part of the four centuries long "national liberation movement" of the Bangsamoro (Moro Nation), although the term is only used in mainland Mindanao as those in the Sulu archipelago had a much distinct culture.[18] The 400-year-long resistance against the Japanese, Americans, and Spanish by the Moro Muslims persisted and morphed into a war for independence against the Philippine state.[19]

The Filipinos in the northern and central Philippines either volunteered or were forced to surrender the existing city-states to become a part of the Spanish regime except for the islands occupied by the Muslims in the southern Philippines. The three-century rule of the Spaniards did not result in the full conquest of the archipelago due to the resistance of the Moros. The violence and brutality of the Spaniards in their attempts to suppress the Moro groups have resulted in killing numerous families and setting villages on fire.

[20]

American colonial era

The United States' Insular Government of the Philippine Islands had only been in existence for two years in 1903 when it initiated the "Homestead Program," which was meant to encourage migration of landless populations from non-Muslim areas of the country into the Muslim-majority areas in Mindanao. Lanao and Cotabato in particular saw an influx of migrants from Luzon and Visayas. This influx of migrants led to tensions about land ownership and disenfranchisement of Lumads and Muslims, because the mostly-Christian migrants established claims on the land, whereas the native peoples of Mindanao didn't have a land titling system in place at the time. This US-led Homestead Program, which was later continued or copied by Philippine administrations after independence, is therefore often cited as one of the root-causes of what would later become the larger Moro conflict.[21]

World War II

In 1942, during the early stages of the Pacific War of the Second World War, troops of the Japanese Imperial Forces invaded and overran Mindanao, and the native Moro Muslims waged an insurgency against the Japanese.[citation needed]

Three years later, in 1945, combined United States and Philippine Commonwealth Army troops liberated Mindanao, and with the help of local guerrilla units, ultimately defeated the Japanese forces occupying the region.[citation needed]

Postwar era

Under pressure to resolve agrarian unrest in various parts of the country, and noting that Mindanao was rich in mineral resources and weather favorable to agriculture, later Philippine presidents continued the promotion of migration which the American colonial government began in 1903. Massive arrivals of non-Muslim migrants happened particularly during the Commonwealth period under President Manuel Quezon and later under right-wing presidents Ramon Magsaysay and Ferdinand Marcos.[22] As a result, the proportion of indigenous peoples in Mindanao to shrink from majority in 1913 to minority by 1976.[22] The best lands in Mindanao were given to settlers and owners of corporate agriculture, while most development investments and government services were offered to the Christian population. This caused the Muslim population to be backward and rank among the poorest in their own country.[23] The resettlement programme was not entirely peaceful as some settlers managed to obtain land from the native Muslims through harassment and other violent efforts which drove the Muslims out of their own lands.[24]

The Muslims felt alienated by the Philippine government and felt threatened by the migrants' economic and political domination in their own homeland, the same way the Lumads were displaced centuries ago when Islam arrived in the Philippines. Some Muslim groups turned to extortion and violence to protect their land and avoid being displaced. These efforts at “integration” are credited for helping the Moro identity in mainland Mindanao crystallize, because the Muslims’ ability to identify with the rest of Filipino nation suffered in light of the threat to their economic and social safety.[buzzword][25]

The Philippine government did not immediately recognize Islamic laws which resulted in the system of education and the socioeconomic development of the Muslims. Children studying in public schools were forced to learn about Christianity while the Bangsamoros struggled with their economy, land, and ownership, and the persistence of hostile and unjust actions compared to the Christian communities in Mindanao. [26]

As an effect of the resettlement, traditional Muslim leaders (also referred as datu) were also voted out during the polls as Christians, who made up a significant majority of the voters, preferred the Christian politicians over them. These local datus suffered a loss in prestige as they could no longer control the Muslim lands.[27] These politicians lost much of the capabilities they had possessed initially to manage the Muslim populace.[28]

The Jabidah Massacre and its impact

In March 1968, fishermen in Manila Bay rescued a Muslim man named Jibin Arula from the waters. They discovered that he had suffered from gunshot wounds, and he later recounted that he was the lone survivor of what would later be termed the "Jabidah Massacre."[24][29]

According to Jibin Arula's account, the Marcos administration had gathered a group of Tausūg recruits for an operation called "Project Merdeka" (merdeka being the Malay "freedom"). The military began training them on the island of Corregidor to form a secret commando unit called Jabidah, which would destabilize and take over Sabah.[30] The trainees eventually rejected their mission, for reasons that are still debated by historians today. Jibin Arula said that whatever the reasons behind their objections, all of the recruits aside from him were killed, and he escaped only by pretending to be dead.[29] Marcos loyalist Juan Ponce Enrile, who served as Justice Secretary and Defense Minister during the Marcos administration, claimed this was a hoax, which was reputed as fake news and an attempt "absolve him (Enrile) of his crimes as the architect of martial law".[31][32][33]

Bangsamoro Liberation Organization

Then Lanao del Sur congressman Rashid Lucman called for Congress to begin proceedings to impeach President Marcos after the exposé implied that Marcos was ultimately responsible for the massacre.[34] When his proposal didn't get enough congressional support, he became convinced that Muslims should rule themselves in Muslim Mindanao - a conviction which led him to eventually establish the Bangsamoro Liberation Organization (BMLO),[35] which later joined forces with the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF).[34]

Muslim Independence Movement

Cotabato governor Datu Udtog Matalam [36] saw the anger of the Muslim people of Mindanao and established the Muslim Independence Movement (MIM), which openly called for the secession of the region to create a Muslim state.[37] The MIM did not last long because Datu Udtog Matalam negotiated with Marcos and accepted a post in his cabinet, but many of its members broke away and became the main force of the MNLF.[38]

Martial Law and the creation of the Moro National Liberation Front

On September 23, 1972, Ferdinand Marcos announced that he had placed the entirety of the Philippines, including Muslim Mindanao, under martial law. While Datu Udtog Matalam's MIM was already defunct, one of its former members, Nur Misuari, established the MNLF a month after the declaration of Martial Law, on October 21, 1972.[38]

Proclamation 1081 dissolved the various political groups that had been previously established in the Moro provinces, and with the MIM having already been dissolved, Marcos' declaration of martial law effectively assured the MNLF, which was more radical than its predecessors, would come to dominate the Moro separatist movement.[39]

The 1976 Tripoli Agreement

On December 23, 1976, the Tripoli Agreement was signed between the Philippine government and the MNLF with the deal brokered by then-Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. Under a deal an autonomous region was to be created in Mindanao.[40]

Marcos would later implement the agreement by creating two regional autonomous governments, rather than one, in Regions 9 and 12,[40] which cover ten (instead of thirteen) provinces. This led to the collapse of the peace pact and the resumption of hostilities between the MNLF and Philippine government forces.[41][42]

Establishment of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front

In signing the 1976 Tripoli Agreement, however, Misuari did not consult one of the MNLF's key commanders, Salamat Hashim. Salamat formed a splinter faction along with 57 other MNLF ground commanders, which then became the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).[43]

1987 Jeddah Accord

A year after Marcos was ousted from power during the People Power Revolution, the government under President Corazon Aquino signed the 1987 Jeddah Accord in Saudi Arabia with the MNLF, agreeing to hold further discussions on the proposal for autonomy to the entirety of Mindanao and not just the thirteen provinces stated in the 1976 Tripoli Agreement. In 1989, however, an act establishing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) was passed. The MNLF demanded that the thirteen Tripoli Agreement provinces, majority of which were Christian provinces, be included in the ARMM, but the government refused; eight of those provinces were predominantly Christian. Shortly thereafter, the government held only four provinces as only Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-tawi voted to be included in the ARMM. The four provinces were the only Muslim-majority provinces at the time.[42]

ARMM and peace deal with the MNLF

A plebiscite was held in 1989 for the ratification of the charter which created the ARMM, with Zacaria Candao, a counsel of the MNLF as the first elected regional governor. On September 2, 1996, a final peace deal was signed between the MNLF and the Philippine government under President Fidel Ramos. MNLF leader and founder Nur Misuari was elected regional governor three days after the agreement.[40]

Attempts to create a Bangsamoro autonomous region

In 1996, peace talks between the Philippine government and MNLF's rival group, the MILF, began.[40] The first deal between the national government and the MILF was made in 2008: the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD). The agreement would be declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court many weeks later.[40] The deal would have led to the creation of the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity (BJE). Under the administration of President Benigno Aquino III, two deals were agreed upon between the national government and the MILF: the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro, which was signed on October 15, 2012, and the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro, on March 27, 2014,[44][45] which included plans regarding the establishment of a new autonomous region. In 2012, Aquino announced intentions to establish a new autonomous political entity to be named Bangsamoro to replace the ARMM, which he called a "failed experiment".[46] Under his administration, a draft for a Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) was formulated but failed to gain traction to become law, owing in part to the Mamasapano clash that occurred in January 2015[40] that involved the murder of 44 mostly-Christian Special Action Force (SAF) personnel by allegedly combined forces of the MILF and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) after an operation to kill Malaysian militant Zulkifli Abdhir, known by the alias "Marwan".[47]

Bangsamoro Organic Law and 2019 plebiscite

 
Voters look for their names at a precinct in Marawi during the January 21 BOL plebiscite.

Under the presidency of Aquino's successor, Rodrigo Duterte, a new draft for the BBL was made and became legislated into law as the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) in 2018.[40] A plebiscite to ratify the BOL was held on January 21, 2019, with a majority of ARMM voters deciding for the ratification of the law. Voters in Cotabato City voted to join the new autonomous region, while voters in Isabela City voted against inclusion. The Commission on Elections proclaimed that the BOL was "deemed ratified" on January 25, 2019.[48][49] The provincial government of Sulu, where majority voted against inclusion, was also not in favor of the law, with its governor challenging the constitutionality of the law before the Supreme Court. Despite voting against inclusion, Sulu was still included in the Bangsamoro region due to rules stated in the BOL, sparking outrage from residents.[50][51]

In February 2019, the second round of the plebiscite was held in the province of Lanao del Norte and some towns in North Cotabato. The plebiscite resulted in the inclusion of 63 of 67 barangays in North Cotabato that participated. It also resulted in the rejection from the province of Lanao del Norte against the bid of six of its Muslim-majority towns to join the Bangsamoro, despite the six towns (Baloi, Munai, Nunungan, Pantar, Tagoloan and Tangcal) opting to join the Bangsamoro by a sheer majority, with one town even voting for inclusion by 100%. A major camp of the MILF was within the Muslim areas of Lanao del Norte.[52][53]

Transition process

 
President Rodrigo Duterte sounds the agung during the inauguration of Bangsamoro. He is joined by Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim.

With the ratification of the BOL following the plebiscite on January 21, 2019, the abolition process of the ARMM began, paving way for the setting up of the Bangsamoro autonomous region. Under the BOL, a transitional body, the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), was organized pending the election of the new region's government officials in 2022. The second part of the plebiscite held on February 6, 2019, expanded the scope of the future Bangsamoro region to include 63 barangays in North Cotabato.[54] The members of the BTA took their oaths on February 22, 2019, along with the ceremonial confirmation of the plebiscite results of both the January 21, and February 6, 2019, votes. The official turnover from the ARMM to BARMM took place on February 26, 2019, which meant the full abolition of the former.[55][56]

The inauguration of BARMM and the inaugural session of the Bangsamoro Parliament took place on March 29, 2019.[57]

Murad Ebrahim took office as the region's first chief minister.[58]

In 2020, the Bangsamoro parliament requested that the BTA be extended for an additional three years past 2022, to allow further time for the transition.[59]

On October 28, 2021, Duterte signed Republic Act No. 11593, postponing BARMM's first regular parliamentary elections from 2022 to 2025. The law also extended the transition period of the Bangsamoro until 2025.[60]

Following a plebiscite on September 17, 2022, Maguindanao was split into two provinces; Maguindanao del Sur and Maguindanao del Norte.[61]

Administrative divisions

 

Provinces

Bangsamoro consists of 3 component cities, 116 municipalities, and 2,590 barangays. The city of Isabela, despite being part of Basilan, is not under the administrative jurisdiction of the autonomous region. Likewise, 63 barangays in North Cotabato also are part of Bangsamoro despite North Cotabato and their respective parent municipalities not being under the administrative jurisdiction of the autonomous region.[62]

  •  †  Regional center
Province Capital Population (2020)A Area[63] Density Cities Muni. Bgy.
km2 sq mi /km2 /sq mi
Basilan (excluding Isabela City) Lamitan 11.3% 426,207 1,103.50 426.06 390 1,000 1 11 210
Lanao del Sur Marawi 24.2% 1,195,518 3,872.89 1,495.33 310 800 1 39 1,159
Maguindanao del Norte Datu Odin Sinsuat 12.5% 618,421 3,653.64 1,410.68 130 340 0 12 250
Maguindanao del Sur Buluan 14.6% 723,758 1,217.96 470.26 150 390 0 24 258
Sulu Jolo 20.2% 1,000,108 1,600.40 617.92 620 1,600 0 19 410
Tawi-Tawi Bongao 8.9% 440,276 1,087.40 419.85 400 1,000 0 11 203
Cotabato City 6.6% 325,079 176.00 67.95 1,800 4,700 1 37
Special Geographic Area ‡‡ 4.4% 215,433 63
Total 4,944,800 12,711.79 4,908.05 320 830 3 116 2,590
  •  ‡  Cotabato City is an independent component city; figures are excluded from Maguindanao.
 ‡‡  63 barangays are part of the region while their parent municipalities and parent province North Cotabato are not part of Bangsamoro; Area figures for the whole Bangsamoro is yet to into account of these barangays.
^A The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) used the scope of the former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao as its geographic reference for the 2020 census when it was released on July 7, 2021. Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were then not included its population count for Bangsamoro. Statistics for said localities were included in the PSA's count for Soccsksargen.[4][5] On November 9, 2021, as per PSA Board Resolution No. 13 Series of 2021, Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were included in its population count for Bangsamoro and removed from Soccsksargen.[6][7]

Governors and vice governors

Province Image Governor Political Party Vice Governor
 
  Hadjiman Salliman PDP–Laban Yusop Alano
 
  Mamintal Adiong Lakas Mohammad Khalid Adiong
  Ainee Sinsuat Nacionalista Sharifudin Mastura
  Mariam Mangudadatu PDP–Laban Nathaniel Midtimbang
 
  Abdusakur Mahail Tan PDP–Laban Abdusakur Tan II
 
  Yshmael Sali NUP Al-Syed Abdulla Sali

Demographics

As per the organic law, the people "at the advent of the Spanish colonization, were considered natives or original inhabitants of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago and its adjacent islands, shall have the right to identify themselves, their spouses and descendants" as part of the Bangsamoro people.[64]

Population census of Bangsamoro
YearPop.±% p.a.
1918 308,024—    
1939 517,695+2.50%
1948 677,520+3.03%
1960 1,167,928+4.64%
1970 1,466,414+2.30%
1975 1,484,424+0.25%
1980 1,648,272+2.12%
1990 2,234,781+3.09%
1995 2,509,079+2.19%
2000 2,966,894+3.66%
2007 4,379,948+5.52%
2010 3,527,926−7.57%
2015 4,080,825+2.81%
2020 4,944,800+3.85%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[65][66][67][68][6]

Government

Between the ratification of the BOL and the inauguration of its first permanent government in 2025, the BTA will head the region. After the ratification of the BOL, the Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) begins to transition the ARMM into the BARMM.

Organizational structure

 
Wa'lī Kalifa Usman Nando (left) and Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim (right)

Based on the organic law, the autonomous Bangsamoro government system is parliamentary-democratic, similar to that practised in the United Kingdom, which is based on a political party system.[69]

Ceremonial

The ceremonial head of the region is the wa'lī. The Bangsamoro Parliament selects and appoints the wa'lī. The wa'lī has ceremonial functions and powers such as moral guardianship of the territory and convocation and dissolution of the legislature.[70]

Executive

The regional government is headed by a chief minister. Murad Ebrahim is the current chief minister, who was appointed by the Philippine president, Rodrigo Duterte, on an interim basis. The interim chief minister is also the head of the BTA, which also serves the function of serving as the transitional Bangsamoro Parliament.

Once the first regular session of the Bangsamoro Parliament is organized in 2022, the chief minister will be elected by the members of the Bangsamoro Parliament. The chief minister of the Bangsamoro is the chief executive of the regional government, and is assisted by a cabinet not exceeding 10 members. The holder of this position appoints the members of the cabinet, subject to confirmation by the Parliament. The chief minister has control of all the regional executive commissions, agencies, boards, bureaus, and offices.

Cabinet

The Bangsamoro Cabinet is composed of two deputy chief minister and ministers from the members of the parliament. The deputy chief ministers are selected through nomination of the chief minister and are elected by the members of the Parliament. The ministers in the cabinet on their part are appointed by the chief minister.[71]

Council of Leaders

The Council of Leaders advises the chief minister on matters of governance of the autonomous region. It is roughly an equivalent of an unelected Senate, though only advisory, without legislative powers, and not part of the Parliament.[71]

The council consist of the:

  • Chief minister
  • Members of the Congress from the Bangsamoro
  • Governors and mayors of chartered cities in the Bangsamoro
  • Representatives of traditional leaders, non-Moro indigenous communities, women, settler communities, the Ulama, youth, and Bangsamoro communities outside the region.
  • Other sector representatives subject to mechanism laid out by the parliament

Legislative

 
The Bangsamoro Parliament convening at the Shariff Kabunsuan Cultural Complex in Cotabato City.

Under the BOL, the Bangsamoro Parliament serves as the legislature of the autonomous region, mandated to have 80 members and is led by the speaker. The wa'lī, a ceremonial head, could dissolve the parliament.

Regional ordinances are created by the Bangsamoro Parliament, composed of members of Parliament. Members are meant to be elected by direct vote. Regional elections are planned to be held one year after general elections (national and local) depending on legislation from Congress. The first Bangsamoro regional elections are to be held in 2025. Regional officials have a fixed term of three years, which can be extended by an act of Congress.

Under the BOL, the BTA was organized as a transitional body pending the election of the new region's government officials in 2025, with the first regular session of the parliament to be held in 2025.[citation needed]

Judiciary

The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region has its own regional justice system which applies Shari'ah to its residents like its predecessor, the ARMM. Unlike its predecessor though, the BOL, which became effective as of August 10, 2018,[72] has a provision for the creation of a Shari'ah High Court, which, if and when realized, would consist of five justices including a presiding justice and would oversee appellate courts, district courts, and circuit courts. Non-Muslims could also volunteer to submit themselves under the jurisdiction of Shari'ah law. The Bangsamoro justice system also recognizes traditional or tribal laws but these would only apply to disputes of indigenous peoples within the region.[73]

Relation to the central government

The BOL provides that BARMM "shall remain an integral and inseparable part of the national territory of the Republic." The Philippine president exercises general supervision over the regional chief minister. The regional government has fiscal autonomy or the power to create its own sources of revenues and to levy taxes, fees, and charges, subject to Constitutional provisions and the provisions of No. 11054. The regional government has to gain approval from the central government's Department of Finance to receive donations and grants from foreign entities.[74]

Economy


International relations

The International Community has long been supportive of the Bangsamoro Peace Process, with the United Nations and the development agencies of various countries contributing to the success of the Framework Agreement and Comprehansive Agreement on the Bangramoro, and the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law.[82]

Significant support for the Bangsamoro Peace Process has been provided by the various United Nations agencies operating in the Philippines, the World Bank, the Government of Japan both through its Embassy and through JICA, the European Union, USAID, the Australian Government, the New Zealand Government, the government of the United Kingdom, the government of Canada, the government of Sweden, and various other international organizations such as The Asia Foundation.[83][84]

Cultural heritage

The people of the Bangsamoro region, including Muslims, Lumads, and Christians, have a culture that revolves around kulintang music, a specific type of gong music, found among both Muslim and non-Muslim groups of the Southern Philippines. Each ethnic group in BARMM also has their own distinct architectures, intangible heritage, and craft arts.[85][86] A fine example of a distinct architectural style in the region is the Royal Sulu architecture which was used to make the Daru Jambangan (Palace of Flowers) in Maimbung, Sulu. The palace was demolished during the American period after being heavily damaged by a typhoon in 1932, and was never rebuilt.[87][88] It used to be the largest royal palace built in the Philippines. A campaign to faithfully re-establish it in Maimbung town has been ongoing since 1933. A very small replica of the palace was made in a nearby town in the 2010s, but it was noted that the replica does not mean that the campaign to reconstruct the palace in Maimbung has stopped as the replica does not manifest the true essence of a Sulu royal palace. In 2013, Maimbung was designated as the royal capital of the former Sultanate of Sulu by one of the family claimants to the Sulu Sultanate throne where the pretenders are buried there.[clarification needed][89][90]

Natural heritage

The region possesses a vast array of natural landscapes and seascapes with different types of environs. The mainland area includes the Liguasan Marsh, a proposed UNESCO tentative site, and Lake Lanao, one of the 17 most ancient lakes in the world. The Sulu archipelago region includes the Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary (a UNESCO tentative site), Bongao Peak, and the Basilan Rainforest.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Bangsamoro Autonomy Act No. 13" (PDF). Bangsamoro Parliament. Retrieved February 24, 2021. The seat of the Bangsamoro Government shall be in Cotabato City, unless otherwise provided by the Bangsamoro Parliament in a subsequent law.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b "Gross Regional Domestic Product". openstat.psa.gov.ph. Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  3. ^ Ul Khaliq, Riyaz (January 18, 2021). "Philippines: Bangsamoro begins anniversary celebrations". Anadolu Agency. Retrieved February 24, 2021. Last year, the BARMM passed the Bangsamoro Administrative Code, which marks January 21 as the Bangsamoro Foundation Day and declared it a non-working holiday.
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External links

  • Bangsamoro Transition Commission
  • Bangsamoro Organic Law Bicameral Final Report text
  • OpenBangsamoro November 12, 2020, at the Wayback Machine

bangsamoro, other, uses, disambiguation, officially, autonomous, region, muslim, mindanao, barmm, filipino, rehiyong, awtonomo, muslim, mindanao, arabic, منطقة, بانجسامورو, ذاتية, الحكم, minṭaqah, banjisāmūrū, dhātiyyah, ḥukm, autonomous, region, located, sout. For other uses see Bangsamoro disambiguation Bangsamoro officially the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao BARMM Filipino Rehiyong Awtonomo ng Bangsamoro sa Muslim Mindanao Arabic منطقة بانجسامورو ذاتية الحكم Minṭaqah Banjisamuru dhatiyyah al ḥukm is an autonomous region located in the southern Philippines Bangsamoro باڠساموروAutonomous regionBangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim MindanaoFilipino Rehiyong Awtonomo ng Bangsamoro sa Muslim MindanaoArabic منطقة بانجسامورو ذاتية الحكم فى مسلمى مينداناوLeft to right top to bottom Bangsamoro Government Center Bulingan Falls Lamitan Basilan Panampangan Island Sapa sapa Tawi Tawi Polloc Port Parang Maguindanao Lanao Lake at Marawi City and PC Hill Cotabato CityFlagSealAnthem Bangsamoro Hymn source source Location in the PhilippinesOpenStreetMapCoordinates 7 13 N 124 15 E 7 22 N 124 25 E 7 22 124 25 Coordinates 7 13 N 124 15 E 7 22 N 124 25 E 7 22 124 25CountryPhilippinesIsland groupMindanaoCreation plebiscitecJanuary 21 2019TurnovercFebruary 26 2019Inauguration of governmentMarch 29 2019Regional centerCotabato City 1 Government TypeDevolved regional parliamentary government within a unitary presidential republic BodyBangsamoro Transition Authority Wa liKhalipha Nando Chief MinisterMurad Ebrahim Deputy Chief MinistersAli Solaiman Deputy for the Mainland Albakil Jikiri Deputy for the Islands Speaker of the ParliamentPangalian BalindongPopulation 2020 census d Total4 944 800 Households832 908DemonymBangsamoroTime zoneUTC 08 00 PST Provinces6 Basilan except Isabela City Lanao del SurMaguindanao del NorteMaguindanao del SurSuluTawi TawiCities3 Cotabato CityLamitanMarawiMunicipalities116Barangays2 590 including 63 in the special geographic area in Cotabato Legislative districts8LanguagesMaguindanaonMaranaoYakanTausugSamaIranunTiruraySabah MalayTagalogEnglishArabicChavacanoCebuanoGDP 2021 284 billion 5 billion 2 Growth rate 7 5 2 HDI0 646 Medium HDI rank17th in Philippines 2019 Websitebangsamoro wbr gov wbr ph In various local languages written in Jawi script Two part plebiscite held in two dates The first part held on January 21 2019 was for the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law the charter legislation of the region while the second part was to determine the final possible expanded scope of the region s territory January 21 2019 is recognized as the Bangsamoro Foundation Day as per the Bangsamoro Administrative Code 3 Effective dissolution of the predecessor autonomous region Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ARMM and turnover of governance to the interim body Bangsamoro Transition Authority The Philippine Statistics Authority PSA used the scope of the former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao as its geographic reference for the 2020 census when it was released on July 7 2021 Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were then not included its population count for Bangsamoro Statistics for said localities were included in the PSA s count for Soccsksargen 4 5 On November 9 2021 as per PSA Board Resolution No 13 Series of 2021 Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were included in its population count for Bangsamoro and removed from Soccsksargen 6 7 Replacing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ARMM the BARMM was formed with the ratification of its basic law the Bangsamoro Organic Law following a two part legally binding plebiscite in Western Mindanao held on January 21 and February 6 2019 The ratification was confirmed a few days later on January 25 by the Commission on Elections COMELEC The establishment of Bangsamoro was the culmination of several years of peace talks between the Philippine government and several autonomist groups in particular the Moro Islamic Liberation Front MILF which rejected the validity of the ARMM and called for the creation of a region with more powers devolved from the national government A framework agreement known as the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro was negotiated between the Benigno Aquino III administration and the MILF in 2014 After continued negotiations and debates over certain provisions the Congress of the Philippines created and ratified a basic law for the region now referred to as the Bangsamoro Organic Law the bill was signed into law by President Rodrigo Duterte on July 26 2018 Despite questions on the region s constitutionality as it would have adopted a parliamentary system in an area of a country with a presidential system of government no judicial ruling was made against the organic law and consequently the COMELEC held two part plebiscite one by ARMM citizens determining whether to dissolve the ARMM and immediately replace it with the Bangsamoro and following the victory of the yes vote on the first part 8 9 10 and the second part taken by neighboring municipalities and barangays in the provinces of Lanao del Norte and Cotabato regarding their cession to the Bangsamoro region 11 12 13 14 As a result of the second part of the plebiscite 63 barangays of Cotabato province were handed over to the Bangsamoro government adding to the autonomous region s territory 15 11 The Bangsamoro took the place of the ARMM as the only Muslim majority autonomous region in the Philippines 16 Currently in transition until 2025 the Bangsamoro government has been considered a testing ground for the wider debate on constitutional reform and federalism in the Philippines Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early history and arrival of Islam 2 2 Spanish colonial era 2 3 American colonial era 2 4 World War II 2 5 Postwar era 2 6 The Jabidah Massacre and its impact 2 6 1 Bangsamoro Liberation Organization 2 6 2 Muslim Independence Movement 2 7 Martial Law and the creation of the Moro National Liberation Front 2 8 The 1976 Tripoli Agreement 2 9 Establishment of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front 2 10 1987 Jeddah Accord 2 11 ARMM and peace deal with the MNLF 2 12 Attempts to create a Bangsamoro autonomous region 2 13 Bangsamoro Organic Law and 2019 plebiscite 2 14 Transition process 3 Administrative divisions 3 1 Provinces 3 1 1 Governors and vice governors 4 Demographics 5 Government 5 1 Organizational structure 5 1 1 Ceremonial 5 1 2 Executive 5 1 2 1 Cabinet 5 1 2 2 Council of Leaders 5 1 3 Legislative 5 1 4 Judiciary 5 2 Relation to the central government 6 Economy 7 International relations 8 Cultural heritage 9 Natural heritage 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEtymology EditThe recently coined term Bangsamoro is derived from the Old Malay word bangsa race or nation and Moro the collective term for the various predominantly Muslim ethnic groups in the Philippines from Spanish Moors citation needed History Edit A view of Cotabato City as seen in February 2018 See also Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Early history and arrival of Islam Edit Approximate historical extent of the Muslim sultanates of Sulu Maguindanao and Lanao For the most part of Philippines history the region and most of Mindanao have been a separate territory which enabled it to develop its own culture and identity The westernmost and west central areas have been the traditional homeland of Muslim Filipinos since the 15th century even before the arrival of the Spanish who began to colonize most of the Philippines in 1565 Majority of Mindanao was the homeland of indigenous Lumad groups who were neither Christians nor Muslims Muslim missionaries arrived in Tawi Tawi in 1380 and started the colonization of the area and the conversion of the native population to Islam In 1457 the Sultanate of Sulu was founded and not long after that the sultanates of Maguindanao and Buayan were also established At the time when most of the Philippines was under Spanish rule these sultanates maintained their independence and regularly challenged Spanish domination of the Philippines by conducting raids on Spanish coastal towns in the north and repulsing repeated Spanish incursions in their territory It was not until the last quarter of the 19th century that the Sultanate of Sulu formally recognized Spanish suzerainty but these areas remained loosely controlled by the Spanish as their sovereignty was limited to military stations and garrisons and pockets of civilian settlements in Zamboanga and Cotabato 17 until they had to abandon the region as a consequence of their defeat in the Spanish American War Spanish colonial era Edit The Moros had a history of resistance against Spanish American and Japanese rule for over 400 years The violent armed struggle against the Japanese Filipinos Spanish and Americans is considered by modern Moro Muslim leaders as part of the four centuries long national liberation movement of the Bangsamoro Moro Nation although the term is only used in mainland Mindanao as those in the Sulu archipelago had a much distinct culture 18 The 400 year long resistance against the Japanese Americans and Spanish by the Moro Muslims persisted and morphed into a war for independence against the Philippine state 19 The Filipinos in the northern and central Philippines either volunteered or were forced to surrender the existing city states to become a part of the Spanish regime except for the islands occupied by the Muslims in the southern Philippines The three century rule of the Spaniards did not result in the full conquest of the archipelago due to the resistance of the Moros The violence and brutality of the Spaniards in their attempts to suppress the Moro groups have resulted in killing numerous families and setting villages on fire 20 American colonial era Edit The United States Insular Government of the Philippine Islands had only been in existence for two years in 1903 when it initiated the Homestead Program which was meant to encourage migration of landless populations from non Muslim areas of the country into the Muslim majority areas in Mindanao Lanao and Cotabato in particular saw an influx of migrants from Luzon and Visayas This influx of migrants led to tensions about land ownership and disenfranchisement of Lumads and Muslims because the mostly Christian migrants established claims on the land whereas the native peoples of Mindanao didn t have a land titling system in place at the time This US led Homestead Program which was later continued or copied by Philippine administrations after independence is therefore often cited as one of the root causes of what would later become the larger Moro conflict 21 World War II Edit In 1942 during the early stages of the Pacific War of the Second World War troops of the Japanese Imperial Forces invaded and overran Mindanao and the native Moro Muslims waged an insurgency against the Japanese citation needed Three years later in 1945 combined United States and Philippine Commonwealth Army troops liberated Mindanao and with the help of local guerrilla units ultimately defeated the Japanese forces occupying the region citation needed Postwar era Edit Under pressure to resolve agrarian unrest in various parts of the country and noting that Mindanao was rich in mineral resources and weather favorable to agriculture later Philippine presidents continued the promotion of migration which the American colonial government began in 1903 Massive arrivals of non Muslim migrants happened particularly during the Commonwealth period under President Manuel Quezon and later under right wing presidents Ramon Magsaysay and Ferdinand Marcos 22 As a result the proportion of indigenous peoples in Mindanao to shrink from majority in 1913 to minority by 1976 22 The best lands in Mindanao were given to settlers and owners of corporate agriculture while most development investments and government services were offered to the Christian population This caused the Muslim population to be backward and rank among the poorest in their own country 23 The resettlement programme was not entirely peaceful as some settlers managed to obtain land from the native Muslims through harassment and other violent efforts which drove the Muslims out of their own lands 24 The Muslims felt alienated by the Philippine government and felt threatened by the migrants economic and political domination in their own homeland the same way the Lumads were displaced centuries ago when Islam arrived in the Philippines Some Muslim groups turned to extortion and violence to protect their land and avoid being displaced These efforts at integration are credited for helping the Moro identity in mainland Mindanao crystallize because the Muslims ability to identify with the rest of Filipino nation suffered in light of the threat to their economic and social safety buzzword 25 The Philippine government did not immediately recognize Islamic laws which resulted in the system of education and the socioeconomic development of the Muslims Children studying in public schools were forced to learn about Christianity while the Bangsamoros struggled with their economy land and ownership and the persistence of hostile and unjust actions compared to the Christian communities in Mindanao 26 As an effect of the resettlement traditional Muslim leaders also referred as datu were also voted out during the polls as Christians who made up a significant majority of the voters preferred the Christian politicians over them These local datus suffered a loss in prestige as they could no longer control the Muslim lands 27 These politicians lost much of the capabilities they had possessed initially to manage the Muslim populace 28 The Jabidah Massacre and its impact Edit Main article Jabidah massacre In March 1968 fishermen in Manila Bay rescued a Muslim man named Jibin Arula from the waters They discovered that he had suffered from gunshot wounds and he later recounted that he was the lone survivor of what would later be termed the Jabidah Massacre 24 29 According to Jibin Arula s account the Marcos administration had gathered a group of Tausug recruits for an operation called Project Merdeka merdeka being the Malay freedom The military began training them on the island of Corregidor to form a secret commando unit called Jabidah which would destabilize and take over Sabah 30 The trainees eventually rejected their mission for reasons that are still debated by historians today Jibin Arula said that whatever the reasons behind their objections all of the recruits aside from him were killed and he escaped only by pretending to be dead 29 Marcos loyalist Juan Ponce Enrile who served as Justice Secretary and Defense Minister during the Marcos administration claimed this was a hoax which was reputed as fake news and an attempt absolve him Enrile of his crimes as the architect of martial law 31 32 33 Bangsamoro Liberation Organization Edit Main article Rashid Lucman Then Lanao del Sur congressman Rashid Lucman called for Congress to begin proceedings to impeach President Marcos after the expose implied that Marcos was ultimately responsible for the massacre 34 When his proposal didn t get enough congressional support he became convinced that Muslims should rule themselves in Muslim Mindanao a conviction which led him to eventually establish the Bangsamoro Liberation Organization BMLO 35 which later joined forces with the Moro National Liberation Front MNLF 34 Muslim Independence Movement Edit Main article Muslim Independence Movement Cotabato governor Datu Udtog Matalam 36 saw the anger of the Muslim people of Mindanao and established the Muslim Independence Movement MIM which openly called for the secession of the region to create a Muslim state 37 The MIM did not last long because Datu Udtog Matalam negotiated with Marcos and accepted a post in his cabinet but many of its members broke away and became the main force of the MNLF 38 Martial Law and the creation of the Moro National Liberation Front Edit Main articles Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos and Moro National Liberation Front On September 23 1972 Ferdinand Marcos announced that he had placed the entirety of the Philippines including Muslim Mindanao under martial law While Datu Udtog Matalam s MIM was already defunct one of its former members Nur Misuari established the MNLF a month after the declaration of Martial Law on October 21 1972 38 Proclamation 1081 dissolved the various political groups that had been previously established in the Moro provinces and with the MIM having already been dissolved Marcos declaration of martial law effectively assured the MNLF which was more radical than its predecessors would come to dominate the Moro separatist movement 39 The 1976 Tripoli Agreement Edit Main article 1976 Tripoli Agreement On December 23 1976 the Tripoli Agreement was signed between the Philippine government and the MNLF with the deal brokered by then Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi Under a deal an autonomous region was to be created in Mindanao 40 Marcos would later implement the agreement by creating two regional autonomous governments rather than one in Regions 9 and 12 40 which cover ten instead of thirteen provinces This led to the collapse of the peace pact and the resumption of hostilities between the MNLF and Philippine government forces 41 42 Establishment of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front Edit Main article Moro Islamic Liberation Front In signing the 1976 Tripoli Agreement however Misuari did not consult one of the MNLF s key commanders Salamat Hashim Salamat formed a splinter faction along with 57 other MNLF ground commanders which then became the Moro Islamic Liberation Front MILF 43 1987 Jeddah Accord Edit Main article Jeddah Accord A year after Marcos was ousted from power during the People Power Revolution the government under President Corazon Aquino signed the 1987 Jeddah Accord in Saudi Arabia with the MNLF agreeing to hold further discussions on the proposal for autonomy to the entirety of Mindanao and not just the thirteen provinces stated in the 1976 Tripoli Agreement In 1989 however an act establishing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ARMM was passed The MNLF demanded that the thirteen Tripoli Agreement provinces majority of which were Christian provinces be included in the ARMM but the government refused eight of those provinces were predominantly Christian Shortly thereafter the government held only four provinces as only Lanao del Sur Maguindanao Sulu and Tawi tawi voted to be included in the ARMM The four provinces were the only Muslim majority provinces at the time 42 ARMM and peace deal with the MNLF Edit Main article 1996 Final Peace Agreement A plebiscite was held in 1989 for the ratification of the charter which created the ARMM with Zacaria Candao a counsel of the MNLF as the first elected regional governor On September 2 1996 a final peace deal was signed between the MNLF and the Philippine government under President Fidel Ramos MNLF leader and founder Nur Misuari was elected regional governor three days after the agreement 40 Attempts to create a Bangsamoro autonomous region Edit In 1996 peace talks between the Philippine government and MNLF s rival group the MILF began 40 The first deal between the national government and the MILF was made in 2008 the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain MOA AD The agreement would be declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court many weeks later 40 The deal would have led to the creation of the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity BJE Under the administration of President Benigno Aquino III two deals were agreed upon between the national government and the MILF the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro which was signed on October 15 2012 and the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro on March 27 2014 44 45 which included plans regarding the establishment of a new autonomous region In 2012 Aquino announced intentions to establish a new autonomous political entity to be named Bangsamoro to replace the ARMM which he called a failed experiment 46 Under his administration a draft for a Bangsamoro Basic Law BBL was formulated but failed to gain traction to become law owing in part to the Mamasapano clash that occurred in January 2015 40 that involved the murder of 44 mostly Christian Special Action Force SAF personnel by allegedly combined forces of the MILF and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters BIFF after an operation to kill Malaysian militant Zulkifli Abdhir known by the alias Marwan 47 Bangsamoro Organic Law and 2019 plebiscite Edit Main articles Bangsamoro Organic Law and 2019 Bangsamoro Autonomous Region creation plebiscite Voters look for their names at a precinct in Marawi during the January 21 BOL plebiscite Under the presidency of Aquino s successor Rodrigo Duterte a new draft for the BBL was made and became legislated into law as the Bangsamoro Organic Law BOL in 2018 40 A plebiscite to ratify the BOL was held on January 21 2019 with a majority of ARMM voters deciding for the ratification of the law Voters in Cotabato City voted to join the new autonomous region while voters in Isabela City voted against inclusion The Commission on Elections proclaimed that the BOL was deemed ratified on January 25 2019 48 49 The provincial government of Sulu where majority voted against inclusion was also not in favor of the law with its governor challenging the constitutionality of the law before the Supreme Court Despite voting against inclusion Sulu was still included in the Bangsamoro region due to rules stated in the BOL sparking outrage from residents 50 51 In February 2019 the second round of the plebiscite was held in the province of Lanao del Norte and some towns in North Cotabato The plebiscite resulted in the inclusion of 63 of 67 barangays in North Cotabato that participated It also resulted in the rejection from the province of Lanao del Norte against the bid of six of its Muslim majority towns to join the Bangsamoro despite the six towns Baloi Munai Nunungan Pantar Tagoloan and Tangcal opting to join the Bangsamoro by a sheer majority with one town even voting for inclusion by 100 A major camp of the MILF was within the Muslim areas of Lanao del Norte 52 53 Transition process Edit Main article Bangsamoro transition period President Rodrigo Duterte sounds the agung during the inauguration of Bangsamoro He is joined by Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim With the ratification of the BOL following the plebiscite on January 21 2019 the abolition process of the ARMM began paving way for the setting up of the Bangsamoro autonomous region Under the BOL a transitional body the Bangsamoro Transition Authority BTA was organized pending the election of the new region s government officials in 2022 The second part of the plebiscite held on February 6 2019 expanded the scope of the future Bangsamoro region to include 63 barangays in North Cotabato 54 The members of the BTA took their oaths on February 22 2019 along with the ceremonial confirmation of the plebiscite results of both the January 21 and February 6 2019 votes The official turnover from the ARMM to BARMM took place on February 26 2019 which meant the full abolition of the former 55 56 The inauguration of BARMM and the inaugural session of the Bangsamoro Parliament took place on March 29 2019 57 Murad Ebrahim took office as the region s first chief minister 58 In 2020 the Bangsamoro parliament requested that the BTA be extended for an additional three years past 2022 to allow further time for the transition 59 On October 28 2021 Duterte signed Republic Act No 11593 postponing BARMM s first regular parliamentary elections from 2022 to 2025 The law also extended the transition period of the Bangsamoro until 2025 60 Following a plebiscite on September 17 2022 Maguindanao was split into two provinces Maguindanao del Sur and Maguindanao del Norte 61 Administrative divisions Edit Provinces Edit Bangsamoro consists of 3 component cities 116 municipalities and 2 590 barangays The city of Isabela despite being part of Basilan is not under the administrative jurisdiction of the autonomous region Likewise 63 barangays in North Cotabato also are part of Bangsamoro despite North Cotabato and their respective parent municipalities not being under the administrative jurisdiction of the autonomous region 62 Regional center Province Capital Population 2020 A Area 63 Density Cities Muni Bgy km2 sq mi km2 sq miBasilan excluding Isabela City Lamitan 11 3 426 207 1 103 50 426 06 390 1 000 1 11 210Lanao del Sur Marawi 24 2 1 195 518 3 872 89 1 495 33 310 800 1 39 1 159Maguindanao del Norte Datu Odin Sinsuat 12 5 618 421 3 653 64 1 410 68 130 340 0 12 250Maguindanao del Sur Buluan 14 6 723 758 1 217 96 470 26 150 390 0 24 258Sulu Jolo 20 2 1 000 108 1 600 40 617 92 620 1 600 0 19 410Tawi Tawi Bongao 8 9 440 276 1 087 40 419 85 400 1 000 0 11 203Cotabato City 6 6 325 079 176 00 67 95 1 800 4 700 1 37Special Geographic Area 4 4 215 433 63Total 4 944 800 12 711 79 4 908 05 320 830 3 116 2 590 Cotabato City is an independent component city figures are excluded from Maguindanao 63 barangays are part of the region while their parent municipalities and parent province North Cotabato are not part of Bangsamoro Area figures for the whole Bangsamoro is yet to into account of these barangays A The Philippine Statistics Authority PSA used the scope of the former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao as its geographic reference for the 2020 census when it was released on July 7 2021 Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were then not included its population count for Bangsamoro Statistics for said localities were included in the PSA s count for Soccsksargen 4 5 On November 9 2021 as per PSA Board Resolution No 13 Series of 2021 Cotabato City and the Special Geographic Area were included in its population count for Bangsamoro and removed from Soccsksargen 6 7 Governors and vice governors Edit Province Image Governor Political Party Vice Governor Basilan Hadjiman Salliman PDP Laban Yusop Alano Lanao del Sur Mamintal Adiong Lakas Mohammad Khalid AdiongMaguindanao del Norte Ainee Sinsuat Nacionalista Sharifudin MasturaMaguindanao del Sur Mariam Mangudadatu PDP Laban Nathaniel Midtimbang Sulu Abdusakur Mahail Tan PDP Laban Abdusakur Tan II Tawi Tawi Yshmael Sali NUP Al Syed Abdulla SaliDemographics EditAs per the organic law the people at the advent of the Spanish colonization were considered natives or original inhabitants of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago and its adjacent islands shall have the right to identify themselves their spouses and descendants as part of the Bangsamoro people 64 Population census of BangsamoroYearPop p a 1918308 024 1939517 695 2 50 1948677 520 3 03 19601 167 928 4 64 19701 466 414 2 30 19751 484 424 0 25 19801 648 272 2 12 19902 234 781 3 09 19952 509 079 2 19 20002 966 894 3 66 20074 379 948 5 52 20103 527 926 7 57 20154 080 825 2 81 20204 944 800 3 85 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 65 66 67 68 6 Government EditMain article Bangsamoro Transition Authority Between the ratification of the BOL and the inauguration of its first permanent government in 2025 the BTA will head the region After the ratification of the BOL the Bangsamoro Transition Commission BTC begins to transition the ARMM into the BARMM Organizational structure Edit Wa li Kalifa Usman Nando left and Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim right Based on the organic law the autonomous Bangsamoro government system is parliamentary democratic similar to that practised in the United Kingdom which is based on a political party system 69 Ceremonial Edit The ceremonial head of the region is the wa li The Bangsamoro Parliament selects and appoints the wa li The wa li has ceremonial functions and powers such as moral guardianship of the territory and convocation and dissolution of the legislature 70 Executive Edit The regional government is headed by a chief minister Murad Ebrahim is the current chief minister who was appointed by the Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte on an interim basis The interim chief minister is also the head of the BTA which also serves the function of serving as the transitional Bangsamoro Parliament Once the first regular session of the Bangsamoro Parliament is organized in 2022 the chief minister will be elected by the members of the Bangsamoro Parliament The chief minister of the Bangsamoro is the chief executive of the regional government and is assisted by a cabinet not exceeding 10 members The holder of this position appoints the members of the cabinet subject to confirmation by the Parliament The chief minister has control of all the regional executive commissions agencies boards bureaus and offices Cabinet Edit The Bangsamoro Cabinet is composed of two deputy chief minister and ministers from the members of the parliament The deputy chief ministers are selected through nomination of the chief minister and are elected by the members of the Parliament The ministers in the cabinet on their part are appointed by the chief minister 71 Council of Leaders Edit The Council of Leaders advises the chief minister on matters of governance of the autonomous region It is roughly an equivalent of an unelected Senate though only advisory without legislative powers and not part of the Parliament 71 The council consist of the Chief minister Members of the Congress from the Bangsamoro Governors and mayors of chartered cities in the Bangsamoro Representatives of traditional leaders non Moro indigenous communities women settler communities the Ulama youth and Bangsamoro communities outside the region Other sector representatives subject to mechanism laid out by the parliamentLegislative Edit The Bangsamoro Parliament convening at the Shariff Kabunsuan Cultural Complex in Cotabato City Under the BOL the Bangsamoro Parliament serves as the legislature of the autonomous region mandated to have 80 members and is led by the speaker The wa li a ceremonial head could dissolve the parliament Regional ordinances are created by the Bangsamoro Parliament composed of members of Parliament Members are meant to be elected by direct vote Regional elections are planned to be held one year after general elections national and local depending on legislation from Congress The first Bangsamoro regional elections are to be held in 2025 Regional officials have a fixed term of three years which can be extended by an act of Congress Under the BOL the BTA was organized as a transitional body pending the election of the new region s government officials in 2025 with the first regular session of the parliament to be held in 2025 citation needed Judiciary Edit See also Shari ah in the Philippines Organization The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region has its own regional justice system which applies Shari ah to its residents like its predecessor the ARMM Unlike its predecessor though the BOL which became effective as of August 10 2018 72 has a provision for the creation of a Shari ah High Court which if and when realized would consist of five justices including a presiding justice and would oversee appellate courts district courts and circuit courts Non Muslims could also volunteer to submit themselves under the jurisdiction of Shari ah law The Bangsamoro justice system also recognizes traditional or tribal laws but these would only apply to disputes of indigenous peoples within the region 73 Relation to the central government Edit The BOL provides that BARMM shall remain an integral and inseparable part of the national territory of the Republic The Philippine president exercises general supervision over the regional chief minister The regional government has fiscal autonomy or the power to create its own sources of revenues and to levy taxes fees and charges subject to Constitutional provisions and the provisions of No 11054 The regional government has to gain approval from the central government s Department of Finance to receive donations and grants from foreign entities 74 Economy EditPoverty Incidence of Bangsamoro Source Philippine Statistics Authority 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 International relations EditThe International Community has long been supportive of the Bangsamoro Peace Process with the United Nations and the development agencies of various countries contributing to the success of the Framework Agreement and Comprehansive Agreement on the Bangramoro and the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law 82 Significant support for the Bangsamoro Peace Process has been provided by the various United Nations agencies operating in the Philippines the World Bank the Government of Japan both through its Embassy and through JICA the European Union USAID the Australian Government the New Zealand Government the government of the United Kingdom the government of Canada the government of Sweden and various other international organizations such as The Asia Foundation 83 84 Cultural heritage EditMain articles Music of the Philippines Kulintang List of Cultural Properties of the Philippines in Bangsamoro List of mosques in the Philippines and Spanish Colonial Fortifications of the Philippines The people of the Bangsamoro region including Muslims Lumads and Christians have a culture that revolves around kulintang music a specific type of gong music found among both Muslim and non Muslim groups of the Southern Philippines Each ethnic group in BARMM also has their own distinct architectures intangible heritage and craft arts 85 86 A fine example of a distinct architectural style in the region is the Royal Sulu architecture which was used to make the Daru Jambangan Palace of Flowers in Maimbung Sulu The palace was demolished during the American period after being heavily damaged by a typhoon in 1932 and was never rebuilt 87 88 It used to be the largest royal palace built in the Philippines A campaign to faithfully re establish it in Maimbung town has been ongoing since 1933 A very small replica of the palace was made in a nearby town in the 2010s but it was noted that the replica does not mean that the campaign to reconstruct the palace in Maimbung has stopped as the replica does not manifest the true essence of a Sulu royal palace In 2013 Maimbung was designated as the royal capital of the former Sultanate of Sulu by one of the family claimants to the Sulu Sultanate throne where the pretenders are buried there clarification needed 89 90 Marawi Ginakit boat of the Maguindanao people Bacolod Kalawi Lanao del Sur Daru Jambangan Palace of Flowers in Maimbung Sulu before it was destroyed by a typhoon in 1932 Jolo Sulu Bongao Tawi Tawi A Moro brass lantaka or swivel gun 19th century illustration of a lanong the main warships used by the Iranun and Banguingui people Tausug horsemen in Sulu taken on December 30 1899 Sarimanok statue of the Maranao Yards of Yakan people s cloths A Sama Bajau lepa houseboat c 1905 Pis siyabit headscarf of the Tausugs Palapa a culturally important spicy condiment of the Maranao people Tausug dancers in traditional attire A kutiyapi of the Maguindanao people A malong bearing okir designs Moro blades made from Basilan basih iron Pastil a traditional Maguindanaon food Lami Lamihan Festival A Maranao kulintang ensemble with okir carvingsNatural heritage EditThe region possesses a vast array of natural landscapes and seascapes with different types of environs The mainland area includes the Liguasan Marsh a proposed UNESCO tentative site and Lake Lanao one of the 17 most ancient lakes in the world The Sulu archipelago region includes the Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary a UNESCO tentative site Bongao Peak and the Basilan Rainforest See also EditFramework Agreement on the Bangsamoro Comprehensive Agreement on Bangsamoro Peace process with the Bangsamoro in the Philippines Federalism in the PhilippinesReferences Edit Bangsamoro Autonomy Act No 13 PDF Bangsamoro Parliament Retrieved February 24 2021 The seat of the Bangsamoro Government shall be in Cotabato City unless otherwise provided by the Bangsamoro Parliament in a subsequent law permanent dead link a b Gross Regional Domestic Product openstat psa gov ph Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved May 20 2021 Ul Khaliq Riyaz January 18 2021 Philippines Bangsamoro begins anniversary celebrations Anadolu Agency Retrieved February 24 2021 Last year the BARMM passed the Bangsamoro Administrative Code which marks January 21 as the Bangsamoro Foundation Day and declared it a non working holiday a b BARMM Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Census of Population and Housing 2020 PSA a b Region XII Soccsksargen Census of Population and Housing 2020 PSA a b c Total Population Household Population Number of Households and Average Household Size by Region Province and City Municipality Philippines 2020 PSA March 23 2022 Retrieved April 1 2022 a b PSA Board Resolution No 13 Series of 2021 APPROVING AND ADOPTING THE THIRD QUARTER 2021 PHILIPPINE STANDARD GEOGRAPHIC CODE UPDATES TO INCLUDE THE BANGSAMORO AUTONOMOUS REGION IN MUSLIM MINDANAO BARMM AND CORRECT THE NAMES OF 37 BARANGAYS PDF Philippine Statistics Authority Board November 9 2021 Retrieved April 1 2022 Depasupil William TMT Reyes Dempsey January 23 2019 Yes vote prevails in 4 of 5 provinces The Manila Times Retrieved January 23 2019 Galvez Daphne January 22 2019 Zubiri Overwhelming yes vote for BOL shows Mindanao shedding its history of conflict Inquirer net Retrieved January 22 2019 Esguerra Christian V January 25 2019 New era dawns for Bangsamoro as stronger autonomy law ratified ABS CBN News Retrieved January 25 2018 a b Sarmiento Bong S February 7 2019 21 of 67 villages in North Cotabato join BARMM newsinfo inquirer net Suson Divina February 7 2019 No wins in 13 Lanao del Norte towns Yes wins in only 9 towns newsinfo inquirer net Jennings Ralph July 27 2018 Historic Autonomy Deal for Philippine Muslims Takes Aim at 50 Years of Strife Voice of America Retrieved July 28 2018 Esguerra Anthony Q July 27 2018 EU expresses support for Bangsamoro Organic Law Inquirer net Retrieved July 28 2018 Fonbuena Carmela February 8 2019 63 out of 67 barangays in Cotabato to join Bangsamoro region Rappler Kapahi Anushka D Tanada Gabrielle 2018 The Bangsamoro Identity Struggle and the Bangsamoro Basic Law as the Path to Peace Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses 10 7 1 7 JSTOR 26458484 Mindanao Peace Process Fr Eliseo R Mercado Jr OMI Banlaoi 2012 p 24 Banlaoi 2005 Archived February 10 2016 at the Wayback Machine p 68 Kapahi A D amp Tanada G 2018 July The Bangsamoro Identity Struggle and the Bangsamoro Basic Law as the Path to Peace International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research Volume 10 Issue 7 Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses 2 https www jstor org stable pdf 26458484 pdf refreqid excelsior 3A48a9974f3bd724720e82ca4b66b58b0d amp ab segments amp origin amp acceptTC 1 Damien Kingsbury Senior Lecturer in International Development Damien Kingsbury Costas Laoutides March 5 2015 Territorial Separatism in Global Politics Causes Outcomes and Resolution Routledge p 55 ISBN 978 1 317 63139 2 a b Werning Rainer 2009 Southern Philippines Bitter Legacies of a Long Lasting War In Graf Arndt Kreuzer Peter Werning Rainer eds Conflict in Moro Land Prospects for Peace Universiti Sains Malaysia pp 6 8 Rodell Paul A 2005 The Philippines and the Challenges of International Terrorism In Smith Paul J ed Terrorism and Violence in Southeast Asia Transnational Challenges to States and Regional Stability M E Sharpe pp 125 127 a b Muslim Macapado A 1994 The Moro Armed Struggle in the Philippines The Nonviolent Autonomy Alternative Office of the President and College of Public Affairs Mindanao State University pp 91 93 Wurfel David 1988 Kahin George McT ed Filipino Politics Development and Decay Cornell University Press p 31 Kapahi A D amp Tanada G 2018 July The Bangsamoro Identity Struggle and the Bangsamoro Basic Law as the Path to Peace International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research Volume 10 Issue 7 Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses 2 https www jstor org stable pdf 26458484 pdf refreqid excelsior 3A48a9974f3bd724720e82ca4b66b58b0d amp ab segments amp origin amp acceptTC 1 Ruland Jurgen 2006 Ethnic Conflict Separatism and Terrorism In Hoadley Stephen Ruland Jurgen eds Asian Security Reassessed Institute of Southeast Asian Studies p 233 McKenna Thomas M 1988 Muslim Rulers and Rebels Everyday Politics and Armed Separatism in the Southern Philippines University of California Press p 137 a b Marites Danguilan Vitug Glenda M Gloria March 18 2013 Jabidah and Merdeka The inside story Rappler Archived from the original on September 13 2015 Retrieved September 13 2015 Marcos order Destabilize take Sabah Philippine Daily Inquirer April 2 2000 Retrieved June 19 2015 Sambalud Mart September 27 2018 Massacres during Marcos regime gave birth to Moro resistance Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved October 7 2021 Hataman lashes at Parlade for fake news remarks on Jabidah killings Manila Bulletin August 23 2019 Retrieved October 7 2021 Roxas Pathricia Ann September 16 2019 Solon speaks for AFP DND They re hands off general s comment Jabidah Massacre fake news Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved October 7 2021 a b Martyrs amp Heroes LUCMAN Haroun Al Rashid Bantayog ng mga Bayani May 26 2016 Retrieved January 24 2019 Fallon Joseph E August 1989 Igorot and Moro National Reemergence Fourth World Journal 2 1 Archived from the original on August 18 2007 Retrieved September 5 2007 George T J S 1980 Revolt in Mindanao The Rise of Islam in Philippine Politics Oxford University Press pp 130 134 Majul Cesar A 1985 The Contemporary Muslim Movement in the Philippines Mizan Press p 45 a b Yegar Moshe 2002 Between Integration and Secession The Muslim Communities of the Southern Philippines Southern Thailand and Western Burma Myanmar Lexington Books pp 267 268 Moro National Liberation Front Stanford University Mapping Militants Project Retrieved March 8 2019 a b c d e f g Unson John January 27 2019 Plebiscite in Mindanao Will it be the last The Philippine Star Retrieved January 27 2019 Kin Wah Chin 2004 Southeast Asian Affairs 2004 Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 9812302380 a b Howe Brendan M 2014 Post Conflict Development in East Asia Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1409469438 Mayuga Sylvia L March 26 2019 Stripped naked by history Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved March 26 2019 Legaspi Amita O April 9 2015 Who is he Senate panel to press Iqbal on real name GMA News Retrieved April 10 2015 Regencia Ted March 25 2014 Philippines prepares for historic peace deal Al Jazeera Retrieved August 23 2015 Calonzo Andreo October 7 2012 Govt MILF agree to create Bangsamoro to replace ARMM GMA News Retrieved October 15 2012 Orendain Simone March 28 2015 Philippines Muslim Rebels Try to Salvage Peace Pact Voice of America Retrieved August 23 2015 Sulu cities of Isabela Cotabato to reject BOL The Manila Times January 20 2019 Ranada Pia January 25 2019 Comelec Bangsamoro Organic Law deemed ratified Rappler Sulu voters reject BOL GMA News Online Tomacruz Sofia January 24 2019 Sulu rejects Bangsamoro law Rappler France Presse Agence February 14 2019 Key rebel stronghold left out of Bangsamoro territory ABS CBN News Excluded Lanao del Norte towns may still benefit from new Bangsamoro region transition body member ABS CBN News February 15 2019 Arguillas Carolyn Bangsamoro law ratified how soon can transition from ARMM to BARMM begin MindaNews Retrieved January 26 2019 Unson John February 27 2019 ARMM turns over power to Bangsamoro authority The Philippine Star Retrieved February 27 2019 Arguillas Carolyn February 18 2019 Bangsamoro Transition Authority to take oath February 20 ARMM to BARMM turnover on February 25 MindaNews Retrieved February 18 2019 Arguillas Carolyn March 20 2019 BARMM inauguration reset again new date is March 29 MindaNews Retrieved March 24 2019 Ranada Pia February 24 2019 BARMM Rappler Retrieved February 24 2019 Duterte supports extension of Bangsamoro transition PhilStar November 26 2020 Retrieved November 26 2020 Duterte OKs postponement of first BARMM elections to 2025 inquirer net October 28 2021 Retrieved October 29 2021 With Maguindanao split into 2 Mindanao now has 28 provinces and BARMM has 6 MindaNews September 18 2022 Retrieved September 18 2022 Arguilas Carolyn February 8 2019 Pikit s fate 20 barangays remain with North Cotabato 22 joining BARMM Minda News Retrieved February 9 2019 Bangsamoro Development Plan Integrative Report Chapter 10 PDF Bangsamoro Development Agency 2015 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved May 31 2016 talk page Bajo Anna Felicia Masino Dona January 31 2021 Paghubog Mga Kuwentong Bangsamoro GMA News in Filipino and English Retrieved July 2 2022 Census of Population 2015 ARMM Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved June 20 2016 Census of Population and Housing 2010 ARMM Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved June 29 2016 Censuses of Population 1903 2007 ARMM Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Table 1 Population Enumerated in Various Censuses by Province Highly Urbanized City 1903 to 2007 NSO Census of Population 2020 BARMM Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved July 8 2021 Quintos Patrick January 25 2019 After Bangsamoro Organic Law is ratified now comes the hard part ABS CBN News Retrieved January 26 2019 The autonomous Bangsamoro government will be parliamentary democratic similar to the United Kingdom and based on a political party system Calonzo Andreo September 10 2014 PNoy personally submits draft Bangsamoro law to Congress leaders GMA News Retrieved February 2 2015 a b Gavilan Jodesz January 31 2019 Key positions in the Bangsamoro government Rappler Retrieved February 23 2019 Lalu Gabriel Pabico October 30 2018 Sulu LGU asks SC to junk unconstitutional Bangsamoro law Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved July 25 2020 Bicam approves creation of Shari ah High Court in Bangsamoro Rappler July 12 2018 Retrieved February 8 2019 Laforga Beatrice March 9 2021 Bangsamoro rules for accepting foreign grants approved BusinessWorld Retrieved March 9 2021 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 28 2020 https psa gov ph sites default files NSCB LocalPovertyPhilippines 0 pdf publication date 29 November 2005 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2009 20Poverty 20Statistics pdf publication date 8 February 2011 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Updated 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 20with 20Measures 20of 20Precision 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 2015 20and 202018 xlsx publication date 4 June 2020 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority Int l community reiterates support for peace process Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines January 15 2016 Retrieved October 19 2021 Mindanao Trust Fund Members Mindanao Trust Fund for Reconstruction and Development Program MTF RDP January 13 2015 Archived from the original on August 10 2020 Retrieved October 19 2021 https www un org peacebuilding sites www un org peacebuilding files documents pbf 00107354 project evaluation report final pdf bare URL PDF Kamlian Jamail A 1999 Bangsamoro society and culture a book of readings on peace and development in Southern Philippines MSU Iligan Institute of Technology Iligan Center for Peace Education and Research Retrieved January 26 2019 via University of Wisconsin Madison Libraries Bangsamoro Development Plan Integrative Report Chapter 11 PDF Bangsamoro Development Agency 2015 Archived from the original PDF on August 8 2017 Retrieved May 31 2016 Selga Miguel 1932 The Typhoon of Jolo Indo China April 29 May 5 1932 Monthly Weather Review 60 5 124 125 Bibcode 1932MWRv 60 124S doi 10 1175 1520 0493 1932 60 lt 124b TTOJAM gt 2 0 CO 2 via AMS Publications Philippines Weather Bureau 1932 Meteorological Bulletin Bureau of Printing Whaley Floyd October 21 2013 Obituary Jamalul Kiram III Self proclaimed poorest sultan Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved February 2 2015 Whaley Floyd September 21 2015 Esmail Kiram II Self Proclaimed Sultan of Sulu Dies at 75 The New York Times Retrieved February 2 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bangsamoro Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Bangsamoro Bangsamoro Transition Commission Bangsamoro Organic Law Bicameral Final Report text Bangsamoro Basic Law in draft form OpenBangsamoro Archived November 12 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bangsamoro amp oldid 1129556280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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