Published on 12:00 AM, August 13, 2008

Humanitarian crisis looms in Philippines as fighting continues

The United Nations has begun airlifting food to the southern Philippines to try to avert a major humanitarian crisis as thousands flee fighting between Muslim rebels and troops, officials said yesterday.
Fighting continued Tuesday as soldiers used artillery and helicopter gunships to pound rebel positions around towns and villages in North Cotabato, a poor farming region on the southern island of Mindanao.
The UN's World Food Programme has begun airlifting 400 tonnes of rice to communities affected by the conflict, with 160,000 people having fled their homes.
At the same time the Commission on Human Rights and politicians have called for a halt to the fighting to avert a humanitarian crisis.
According to the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) 43 evacuation centres have been set up for the refugees but they are now overcrowded and fast becoming health hazards.
"This is turning into a humanitarian mess," congresswoman Risa Hontiveros said Tuesday.
"The refugee crisis is an unacceptable cost of the government's mismanagement of the peace process. A peace process should lead to the protection of life and property, and yet what's happening is the opposite," said Hontiveros, who has called for an immediate halt to the fighting.
Fighting began last week after the Supreme Court ordered the government to suspend plans to establish an extended Muslim homeland in the southern Philippines.
The decision saw around 1,500 heavily armed renegade Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) rebels take control of mainly Christian villages and towns in North Cotabato province.
They have ignored requests by their leadership to leave.
"The WFP fully understands that the situation remains fluid, and we will continue to work closely with all concerned to further assess the total number of affected persons and adjust our response accordingly," the UN agency said in a statement issued in Manila.