Sunday, February 10, 2013

Where do armed insurectionists in the South get their financing from to checkmate the AFP?

A FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEM THAT THE REPUBLIC AND CURRENT LEADERSHIP MUST RESOLVE: Where do the armed insurectionists in the South (MILF, MNLF, NPA, Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters mujahideens, Abu Sayyaff bandit group, MILF Bangsamoro Army, etc.) get their financing from to be able to sutain armed insurrections and checkmate the legal armed wing of the Philippines which is the AFP? 

Do they get their financing to pay for insurrection weaponry from Malaysia? From China? From local "taxation"? From protection money from politicians? From America? From the Middle East? From Indonesia? From just about anywhere? 


We believe that until Govt solves this fundamental issue, there will be no peace in Mindanao -- and until Government destroys the financing pipeline or pipelines, sovereignty of the Republic over a vast portion of Mindanao will always be under threat.

NOTE: Similar problems existed in Northern Ireland until the 90s when Irish Americans sustained the terror actions of then terror groups Sinn Fein, IRA, etc by financing them... It was not until Pres Bill Clinton finally decided to cut off the financing pipeline and the media exposed US citizens participation, which effectively destroyed the financing pipeline, that the terror actions of the IRA really stopped.

STORIES and pictures from Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) Jihad Part 1 and BIFF Jihad Part 2 . The BIFF is a breakaway faction of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) which was organised by Hashim Salamat; the MILF in itself is a breakaway faction of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) which was founded by Nur Misuari in the early 70s. All of them had been financed by Malaysia following the discovery of the Philippine Govt's Operation Merdeka in the late 60s.

Lead photo (top picture): MILF weapons display by GMA News Network  Caption: Moro Islamic Liberation Front fighters display their weapons inside the MILF's 101st Base Command in Camp Badar, Maguindanao province, where rebels and government troops exchange fire since last week. Mark Navales

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