CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY—Tuesday morning’s bombings in Basilan are
a defining moment for the Philippines in the run-up to the first-ever automated presidential elections scheduled for May 10, said an executive of the influential Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP).
Monsignor Elmer Abacahin, executive secretary of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines’ (CBCP) Basic Ecclesiastical Community (BEC), said the government’s response to the Basilan attack which killed at least 15 persons will define the outcome of the elections.
“The bombings are a direct attack on our democracy,” he told this reporter by mobile phone. “It has sown fear in the hearts of the people of Basilan, thereby affecting the elections because candidates there are also afraid to campaign. And campaigning is a part of the elections. So if no one campaigns then the elections are already affected,” he added.
Abacahin stressed the importance of the government’s response to the attacks in light of the attacks on two Army detachments in Ampatuan, Maguindanao before midnight on the same day of the Basilan bombings.
Unidentified armed men first launched at least 10 M203 grenades at the detachment of the Army’s 46th Infantry Battalion based in Sitio Masalay, Barangay Matagabong at around 10 p.m. Tuesday.
The second attack took place 30 minutes later at the military detachment in Sitio Lapu-Lapu less than a kilometer away.
Sitio Masalay and Sitio Lapu-Lapu are located within the same area where more than 50 people were massacred on November 23, 2009 allegedly under the order of Datu Unsay town Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr, who is under government custody.
“All these attacks are terroristic attacks and designed to sow fear in the hearts of our people. I personally am condemning in the strongest possible terms these attacks, which are the handiwork of terrorists and barbarians,” Abacahin said in the vernacular.
“However and whatever the government’s response to all these attacks have great implications on the elections on May 10. Thus, I am calling for prudence on the part of the government to study all available options before setting into motion its response to these attacks,” he added.
Abacahin also denied reports that the Basilan bombings have started a Christian-Muslim conflict in Mindanao because one of the sight of the bombing was the Sta. Isabel Cathedral in Isabela, the provincial capital.
“Although one of those attacks was the cathedral in Isabela, I don’t believe it will hasten a religious war in Mindanao. The attacks were purely terroristic and barbaric acts,” he said.
Meanwhile, Abacahin urged the Catholic faithful all over the Philippines to extend financial help to the Basilan prelature, whose Sta. Isabel Cathedral was damaged by Tuesday morning’s attack.
“I am personally calling on the faithful to help our brothers and sisters in Basilan in the rebuilding of their cathedral,” he said.
The Basilan prelature, or more specifically the Prelature of Isabela in Basilan was created on October 12, 1963, and comprises all territories constituting the civil jurisdiction of Basilan Province. It covers a land area of 1,359 square kilometers, and its Catholic population of 83,400 is 31 per cent of total. Its titular patron is the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
130,000 to 140,000 of the more than 300,000 population of Basilan are Catholic Christians. (Bong D. Fabe)







