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Authors: Tom Anthony

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Hayes' execution was broadcast in a dramatic special presentation on Radio Free Mindanao—not like the executions of infidels shown on prerecorded videotape by Middle East TV networks. Native music set the
tone and commentary continued on the air. Hayes could not be heard saying anything that seemed intelligible, but it did mean something when the embassy labs studied the recording later. The description of the proceedings was narrated in detail by the announcer, saying, “This is how we deal with nonbelievers who oppose us.” Listeners heard the surreal rustlings of preparation, a stool moving on a concrete floor, steel chinking on steel, muscles moving against muscles, a muted chop, than another, a chair falling and muffled noises, people talking calmly in stage whispers, then silence. The images were more powerful imagined than when actually seen.

33
Radio Free Mindanao

F
or his breakfast the day after Hayes had been executed, Mahir cracked an egg and dropped it into a frying pan sizzling with cooking oil; the yolk broke and spread out crackling into a shapeless mass. He watched the sibilantly cooking egg and thought it a premonition. It seemed to resemble Mindanao on the map—a raised irregular formation in the center and bubbling arms reaching out into the turbulent sea around it, one arm reaching south toward Sabah, North Borneo, the other arm arching north toward Leyte in the Philippine Sea, with scattered island globules swimming alone in a boiling sea of fat. Mahir saw the NPA and himself snapping and sputtering against the inevitable, a foreboding of the approaching battle.

From the way Kumander Ali analyzed the situation of the New Peoples Army, they could not maintain a large army in the field for very long, but paradoxically they needed a large army to defeat Task Force Davao, which, unknown to him, was being augmented every hour with more infantry and light artillery.

Mahir found it easier to converse with Kumander Ali when Lateef was present, as a catalyst. So later that day he asked Lateef to go with him for a meeting with Ali. Mahir wanted to know what Ali intended to do now that their positions had been probed by the AFP task force. He thought the major attack was likely to happen soon, given the events of the last few days. The Americans had not yet responded to the humiliating execution of one of their officers, but the international news networks had been reporting his execution every hour after editing out the horrific sounds of his death. If Kumander Ali had wanted to make news with the manner of Hayes' death, he had certainly succeeded. In Mahir's view, if Kumander Ali took advantage of the NPA's superior strength in numbers that he enjoyed at the present moment, including the large army of new recruits, and threw the whole mass at the task force before more troops or even the Americans were brought in, he would have the advantage and a good chance to win. But he would have to act soon.

Kumander Ali, drinking his coffee from a worn-out Styrofoam cup smudged with muddy fingerprints, flipped his cigarette butt into the street. As Lateef and Mahir walked up the steps of the hut to join him on the porch, he lit another and casually offered smokes to them also—a welcome luxury, American brand cigarettes for a change, Marlboros made in the Philippines and recently seized from a merchant at a roadblock as a tax payment to the revolution. Lateef squatted down and turned his baseball cap around backwards, looking like a malnourished Latino player on the farm club of a major league team. Mahir squatted on the porch floor as there were no chairs outside; in fact there were no chairs inside, just three benches around the square table where Ali had spread out the map. They were all silent; the presence of his two subordinates seemed to indicate their curiosity about what Ali planned next, and they impatiently waited for him to get to the point where he was ready to talk.

Ali knew about the supposedly secret but openly obvious presence of American army combat troops in Mindanao. He began by telling Mahir, “If we can get the wavering Yankees to waver more, we can get them off this island and end outside influence on our culture.”

“But I am also an outside influence.” Mahir wondered what Ali really thought about him. “I brought in money, just like they do, the only
difference is I carried it in cash. Obviously, if they know about me, I am a target for an American hit squad or an air attack for bringing in the money.”

“Be sure you are, and I'm also a logical target because I'm the chief initiator bringing the Abu Sayaf and the NPA together,” Ali said.

Ali sensed their unspoken questions. “Our war for Mindanao must be seen as universal, not just a local disagreement between neighbors.” He knew generally that independent Islamic cells would also be waging jihad in other countries soon. “If Allah permits me, I will destroy the pride of the Yankees and Zionists who are responsible for this war.” He flipped another cigarette butt into the street.

Mahir, the foreigner, added his perspective. “The world is momentarily mesmerized by images of American dead sons on television. They will have no stomach to continue a war that has no purpose for them. You don't even have oil here for them to take, only tuna fish and pineapples.”

“We must define the cause not only for ourselves, but in the eyes of our enemy,” said Ali, becoming as animated as Lateef had ever seen. “We must apply
ijtihad
, the critical thinking process taught by the Prophet, and determine our actions within the teachings of the Prophet. Study the book!”

For Lateef, the argument seemed simple. He saw no reason for academic debate. “There is no way to interpret the Koran except literally. It tells us whoever offends the Koran will die by the sword; he who defends it will live in paradise.”

Mahir reminded them, “The Koran prohibits killing children, herdsmen or unarmed men, so we must be careful how we employ our power. I don't like the way the American captive was executed. I can't accept such actions.”

“You don't understand the politics of Islam,” Ali lectured him. “The West has combined their president and their pope to unite against us. The Yankees have brought in military police trained in Iraq to lead the PNP and the AFP. Their actions justify our reaction.”

For another half-hour and two more rounds of cigarettes the dialogue continued. Ali's new comrades Aldrin Bumbog and Mehmet Al Zein showed up at the shack unexpectedly and joined the others on the porch. Ali took the newcomers inside where they sat down on the
slatted, rough rattan benches to study the map for a while. After talking with each other quietly and continuously about their problems with camp life, Lateef invited them back to the porch and passed around a liter bottle of Fundador.

Alcohol was permitted only to Islamic warriors fighting in holy war, according to Lateef, who liked brandy and sometimes made on-the-spot interpretations of the rules based upon how he perceived the immediate situation. Alcohol was not the only personal problem Lateef had. Most of his other difficulties were in the relationships between himself and his three wives—such problems as how to manage the money he would bring home after this current undertaking. He was not looking forward to those discussions.

Kumander Ali, unable to read the Koran in Arabic, improvised his own interpretations, stretching the limits of his intellect and knowledge to fill in where he was short on dogma. “We will have justice. In one month, we will be able to follow strictly the laws of the Koran and no longer work for foreigners. Their laws will no longer be needed; we need only the law of the Koran and the codes written there. All will embrace the faith.” Some of this came from his memory of the teachings of the ulamas in his village when he was young.

His speech interested Bumbog as well as Mehmet. Bumbog stated a long-standing problem in his area: “Large tracts of our land are already occupied by Christians, and ownership of tribal lands has been transferred to corporations that mass-cultivate it with cash crops. We have no place to hunt or plant, and every year they extend their fence lines.”

Ali seized the moment. “The Manila government of the north asks us to renounce terrorism as a condition for their cease-fire. How do we respond?” he asked in a raised voice.

“With blood, Ali, with their blood, O Ali!” was the enthusiastic response from the four listeners. Passersby in the street joined in the clamor and fired a few shots into the air, a practice Kumander Ali immediately stopped. They were short on ammo, and some of the troops might have used their last bullets in praising him. If so, they would have to go through the rest of the campaign with empty rifles.

Mahir wondered how his purist philosophy permitted Kumander Ali under the laws of the Koran to offer him the exclusive and lucrative fruitexport
rights of Mindanao for commercial development. He was just as much a foreigner as the Tagalogs, even more so. But Ali's commercial proposal to Mahir was at least half the reason he was still in camp and not already on some
banka
halfway to Indonesia and back to Turkey. Mahir considered how Muslim entrepreneurs in the new independent state could make a profit legal under the laws of the Koran. How did Ali rationalize his planned bribery to get votes with the high morals of the Koran, for example? Who would do the work in the fields? How could they buy tools or fertilizer without capital investment by one of the locals, maybe even the Chinese? Although Turkey was a Muslim country, at least they used currency and traded with their Christian neighbors in Europe. How would Ali manage the great wealth he would control? Mahir listened with curiosity. Lateef merely listened, but was pleased that Mahir was with him. He had grown to like and to respect the Turk, the foreigner who could ask the innocent questions the others heard in their minds but never quite formulated and certainly dared not speak.

Mahir wanted to move into more tactical and less theoretical areas, so he put the question to Kumander Ali: “We have thirty days until the election, thirty days during which we must survive, let alone defend ourselves from the enemy pursuing us. And they are increasing in strength every day. Can we feed our own growing army and all their followers while we sit here in Sultan Kudarat doing nothing?”

Kumander Ali cut him off, showing impatience for the first time since they had met. “Allah will provide. It is not necessary for us to think about this.” Then there was quiet, as the four looked at Ali, surprised by his atypical outburst.

Ali felt he had to paint the big picture and teach his followers what he believed. “The Luzon government has tried to deal with the MNLF and for over ten years we have watched sporadic peace talks, facilitated by outsiders, Malaysia, Syria, Libya, but all this time we kept the pressure on with our regular business throughout Mindanao.”

By “business” the rebel commander referred to kidnapping for ransom and progressive taxation quotas that were little more than extortion, like forcing delivery trucks to pay taxes to gangs when they crossed province or even village borders, effectively stopping deliveries of foodstuffs into the most needy areas. For thirty-six years the NPA had been
kept alive by keeping the people poor, its terrorism discouraging investment. The vicious cycle was self-perpetuating: no investment, no profit, again no investment in their provinces in northern Mindanao, and then unemployment, discontent, hopelessness, and revolution followed in that order.

The captured radio station in Itig, RFM, was still broadcasting news in Visayan, the language understood by most of the people in Mindanao, and foreign to the average Filipino on the other large islands, who spoke Tagalog or other dialects. The news came between the reading of the Koran and prayers in Arabic, and the NPA leaders listened before they made their prayers.

RFM reported, “From North Cotobato to Zamboanga we are now united. Neighbors from Agusan and Surigao, we wait for you to join us! The news: In the south, the former government has admitted they cannot supply food to the residents of T'boli, Banga, and Polomolok, while in the north, our allies, the New Peoples Army, have freed themselves from the oppressors and now join with us here where we can take care of ourselves, Enshallah!”

After a pause the announcer continued, “The corrupt generals and politicians who take bribes in Manila tell us we do not have the right to hold the elections we have already scheduled for next month. But we learned from the Americans that we could. The Yankees taught us how to run elections while war continues during their aggression in Iraq. Elections will be held on schedule. This station supports the MNLF party, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, and the New Peoples Army.”

Then, sure to arouse all who identified themselves with their roots, the inspiring anthem began. First the low notes of the brass
agong
, then the strings, and gradually the legendary voice of Freddie Aguilar:

Filipino against Filipino are fighting in Mindanao
Is all their blood wasted in the land of
Mindanao. Mindanao.
Is there no way to stop it?
Is there no way to end this?
Is the solution only found in war?
In this land of promise
Mindanao. Mindanao

Is there no chance to save
our brothers and our sisters in
Mindanao. Mindanao.

Mahir did not understand the Visayan words, but he felt the emotion and witnessed its effect. His instructions from Sheik Kemal in Lefkosia and the Syrian in Damascus were to support Kumander Ali in his efforts to achieve an Islamic state. And now he was witnessing the creation of that state. Others like him were organizing teams with separate missions in other countries at the same moment, intending to call local elections wherever they were. The United States could not fight them all at once, and Manila could not win alone in combat, having neither the stomach for it nor the resources. The five million U.S. dollars that Mahir had brought into Mindanao would go a long way in this part of the world. They could give 10 dollars to more than 300,000 voters, and that gesture would get them the swing vote and win the election. The rest of the money they needed for personal use, like automobiles, travel expenses, and houses made out of hollow concrete blocks not just raw wood. They might obtain a majority vote without the ten-dollar reward, but the gesture would insure a good turnout. And a minimum of sixty percent of the half million voters in the five voting provinces would be a good enough result to confuse international opinions. Perhaps they would even invite observers to witness procedures and report to the world regarding the validity of the elections.

BOOK: Rebels of Mindanao
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