SOME P175-million worth of infrastructure projects under the Zamboanga City Roadmap to Recovery and Reconstruction (Z3R) Program were inaugurated in Barangays Kasanyangan and Mariki.
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| The Z3R projects - boardwalk in Barangay Mariki and the access road in Barangay Kasanyangan. (City Government photos) |
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) turned over three projects to the City Government on September 28 with Mayor Beng Climaco leading government officials in the ceremony.
The projects were the Valle Vista Subdivision’s access road amounting to P29,457,505.79 in Barangay Kasanyangan whose contractor was RD Interior Junior Construction; the Paniran-Kasanyangan access road also at Valle Vista Subdivision, amounting to P89,999,620.32, and the boardwalk in Barangay Mariki worth P55,910,901.21 built by Vic Lao Construction; and the energization project also in Barangay Mariki undertaken by the Zamboanga City Electric Cooperative.
MNLF Siege
Beneficiaries of the Z3R Program thanked Climaco for aggressively pursuing the projects despite the health crisis due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Most of the beneficiaries were displaced from their settlement following September 9, 2103 deadly attacks here by Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) members.
Supporters of MNLF chieftain Nur Misuari attacked Zamboanga after declaring independence and their failed attempt to raise the Bangsamoro Republik flag at City Hall. Misuari publicly denied involvement in the siege of Zamboanga that displaced over 200,000 people and affected the economies of Basilan and Sulu which are dependent on Zamboanga for their trades and goods.
Climaco has set September 9 as a “Special Day of Remembrance” in honor of all those who perished in the siege that lasted for 3 weeks. And eight years after the deadly attack, residents here are still crying for justice which remains elusive for the innocent victims of the siege.
The
mayor, who chairs the Local Inter-Agency Council that oversees the Z3R Program,
said not all projects have been completed. She lamented that despite her August
31 ultimatum to private contractors to finish
the construction of the Z3R housing units for some 720 families displaced by
the siege were not completed due to some legal issues that have yet
to be resolved to pursue the projects.
The mayor
specifically cited the 720 housing units which remain uncompleted and a housing
backlog by 114 over the period of eight years since the siege. She said there
are legal issues that the National Housing Authority (NHA) has yet to resolve
in the purchase of lots. Also delaying the projects, she said, are the illegal
structures that need to be demolished first.
Climaco said
the local government’s Housing Division will not accept uncompleted and
substandard projects. The mayor repeatedly reminded various government agencies
and private contractors of her ultimatum to finish all construction projects
and even said that she will invite President Rodrigo Duterte to inaugurate the
projects.
Different government agencies and
private contractors committed to speed up works on the Z3R projects after
Salazar’s ultimatum to expedite completion of the projects and to ensure the
remaining victims of the siege who are in temporary shelters be given permanent
housing units.
“As mayor and chairperson of
LIAC, I have given the agencies concerned a deadline until August 2021 to
finish the construction of the housing units and award them to the target
beneficiaries - the internally displaced people,” Climaco said, adding, “we
want our IDPs (internally displaced persons) to know that we have not forgotten
them even as we are currently coping with the Covid pandemic,” the mayor said,
adding her directive was in line with Duterte’s instructions to all government
agencies to have their projects, programs and activities completed before his term
ends next year.
Last year, Climaco also directed
LIAC members to ensure continuity of various projects and programs amid the
Covid-19 pandemic to help alleviate the plight of families displaced by the
MNLF siege.
Misuari signed a peace deal with Manila in
September 1996 ending decades of bloody war. After the peace agreement was
signed, Misuari became the governor of the Muslim autonomous region. But
despite the peace accord, he said there was a widespread disillusionment with
the weak autonomy they were granted.
Under the peace agreement, Manila would have to
provide a mini-Marshal Plan to spur economic development in Muslim areas in the
south and livelihood and housing assistance to tens of thousands of former
rebels to uplift their poor living standards.
It was the second attack by MNLF in the past
decade. In November 2001, hundreds of MNLF members occupied the Cabatangan
Complex and held hostage dozens of civilians, including children; and another
group also attacked a military base in Sulu province in an effort to stop the
elections in the Muslim autonomous region after Misuari was ousted as
governor.
More than 100 people were killed in the fighting
and in the end, then Mayor Maria Clara Lobregat allowed the attackers to leave
Zamboanga in exchange for the hostages. Misuari then escaped by boat to
Malaysia, where he had been arrested and deported to the Philippines and was
eventually pardoned and released by President Gloria Arroyo reportedly in
exchange for MNLF support to her election bid as well as her allies in the
Senate and Congress in 2004.
He also ran several times for governor in Sulu
even while under detention, but lost. Now, President Rodrigo Duterte said he
wanted to resume the peace process with Misuari and ordered police and military
not to arrest the MNLF chieftain. (Zamboanga
Post, Mindanao Examiner)







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