World | Philippines

Court releases Moro rebel on bail to push peace agreement

A Muslim rebel leader who was jailed for leading a botched uprising was freed on bail yesterday so he can join a review of a peace agreement with the government.

  • AP
  • Published: 00:35 April 26, 2008
  • Gulf News

  • Image Credit: EPA
  • Filipino Muslim separatist leader Nur Misuari (left) kisses his child as he is released from house arrest in Quezon City yesterday. Misuari, leader of the Moro National Liberation Front, was released on bail after five years of detention.

Manila: A Muslim rebel leader who was jailed for leading a botched uprising was freed on bail yesterday so he can join a review of a peace agreement with the government.

Nur Misuari founded the Moro National Liberation Front, the Philippines' largest separatist group. It signed a historic 1996 peace accord in exchange for limited autonomy for Muslims in the country's restive south. He was arrested in 2001 and charged with rebellion after his followers launched an attack that killed about 100 people on the southern island of Jolo.

He was initially detained in a police camp outside Manila but was later held under house arrest.

The Justice Department said the court order granting him bail was in line with a recent Cabinet decision. Peace process adviser Jesus Dureza welcomed the decision, calling Misuari "a partner for peace and development".

The Organisation of the Islamic Conference, a 56-member group of Islamic nations, has been mediating in the decades-old insurgency, and had asked the government to free Misuari ahead of May 26-29 talks in Manila on the implementation of the 1996 accord amid complaints it was not being fully enforced.

The Moro National Liberation Front dropped its demand for independence and accepted limited autonomy when it signed the pact.

Another rebel group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, rejected the 1996 peace deal and kept fighting for Muslim self-rule. It signed a ceasefire in 2003, however, and entered talks with the government.

The southern Philippines, considered a Muslim homeland, has remained impoverished and plagued by violence and divisions.

The Moro National Liberation Front leadership has split among feuding factions. A rival ousted Misuari as nominal head of the group, but Misuari's supporters said they would not recognise anyone else.

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