MANILA, Philippines – The Philippine National Police (PNP) is confident that it will be able to replicate on February 6 the same level of safety and security arrangements laid out during Monday’s Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) plebisicite.
“There are a couple of incidents but generally it was peaceful. Everything went smoothly, and we expect that we will maintain the same level of safety and security until the end of the plebiscite and even beyond that,” PNP spokesperson Chief Supt. Benigno Durana Jr. said.
Another BOL plebiscite is scheduled on February 6 in the six municipalities of Lanao del Norte and 39 villages in North Cotabato which petitioned for inclusion in the Bangsamoro.
“[The plebiscite was] very peaceful,” Chief Supt. Graciano Mijares, director of the Police Regional Office in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), also said.
Absent teachers
In Cotabato City, at least 66 teachers did not show up in voting centers due to threats they received on Sunday night, causing delays in the conduct of the plebiscite, said lawyer Rey Sumalipao, Comelec Regional Director for the ARMM.
They were replaced by police officers trained to act as members of the Board of Election Inspectors, according to Supt. Aldrin Gonzales, spokesperson of the Police Region Office Soccsksargen.
READ:At least 66 teachers fail to show up in Cotabato City precincts for BOL plebiscite
Blasts
On the eve of the plebiscite, two explosions rocked the residential compound of Judge Angelito Rasalan of the Municipal Circuit Trial Court in Upi, Maguindanao.
Police later said they are eyeing personal grudge as the motive behind the explosion, but are not discounting the possibility that it could be related to the plebiscite.
READ: Twin blasts rock Cotabato City on eve of BOL plebiscite
Hours after the twin bombings, a fragmentation grenade was also seen near a national high school in Barangay Rosary Heights 1 in Cotabato City on Monday morning.
A police bomb squad detonated the grenade.
READ:Grenade found near school in Cotabato City
Police also confiscated 85 firearms, 12 grenades, 589 bullets, and three bladed weapons since setting up election checkpoints on Jan. 13 until 6 a.m. of Jan. 21.
READ: Cops seize 85 guns, 12 grenades at checkpoints before BOL plebiscite
‘Instrument of peace’
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) chief Ebrahim Murad, meanwhile, said he hopes the BOL will be an “instrument of peace.”
Close to 3,000 members of the MILF were predicted to cast their votes for the plebiscite.
“The Bangsamoro Organic Law will be ratified and the Bangsamoro government will be established immediately after the ratification. We are very hopeful that BOL will be an instrument for peace, an instrument for progress and development,” Murad said as he cast his vote at Simuay Junction Central Elementary School in Sultan Kudarat.
READ:MILF Chief Ebrahim Murad on plebiscite: There is light at end of tunnel
The BOL, if ratified, would abolish the ARMM and replace it with the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) ./gsg