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PHCulture11 days ago

SC urged to decide BARMM petition after BTA’s ‘non-compliance’

A group called AMANA-BARMM has urged the Supreme Court of the Philippines to resolve a pending petition regarding the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM). The petition seeks to invalidate two laws related to parliamentary elections in the region. The group claims the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) has failed to comply with court-ordered submissions, and they argue that non-compliance should result in consequences. They emphasize the importance of respecting the court, upholding the rule of law, and ensuring the credibility of the planned 2026 BARMM parliamentary选举.

Supreme Court building /INQUIRER PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines — A group has urged the Supreme Court (SC) to already decide on its pending petition on the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) after the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) allegedly failed to comply anew with the court-ordered submissions.

On Tuesday, the AMANA-BARMM held a rally at the SC headquarters in the City of Manila to push the high court to act on its petition seeking to set aside two laws necessary for holding parliamentary elections in the BARMM.

READ: Petition filed against poll-related BARMM laws

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In a statement following the rally, AMANA-BARMM members and petitioners Sultan Alim Saad Amate and Maulana Mamutuk said the pending petition is about “respect for the Court, the rule of law, and the credibility of the September 2026 BARMM parliamentary election.”

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Amate pointed out that if a respondent of a petition in any court refuses or fails to answer, “there must be a consequence.”

“We respectfully plead with the Supreme Court: treat the BTA as in default, resolve the petition, and protect the Bangsamoro vote,” Amate said.

READ: SC TRO sought vs some BARMM rules ahead of parliament polls

Meanwhile, Mamutuk emphasized that the BARMM election will not be pushed through if the basic districting, maps, population records, and representation are “still unclear.”

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“If the district is wrong, the vote is wrong. If the vote is wrong, the Parliament is wrong,” said Mamutak, speaking Filipino.

On May 22, Amate and Mamutuk filed the petition before the SC seeking a temporary restraining order against certain provisions of the Bangsamoro Autonomy Act (BAA).

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Among the provisions questioned was Section 4 of BAA 86, which the petitioners said apportioned districts inequitably, as it granted two parliamentary districts to the Special Geographical Areas with a population of 214,703, while allotting only one district to Marawi City despite its larger population of 259,993. /jpv

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Read the full article at Philippine Daily Inquirer
Source document: Supreme Court

2 reports

GMA News OnlineIndependentCenterFactual 88Objective 9011 days ago
SC junks teacher's petition to declare June 3 Senate session valid

The Supreme Court has dismissed a petition filed by teachers seeking to declare the June 3 Senate session as valid.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a legal decision without apparent framing or slant. It presents the outcome of the Supreme Court's action neutrally, without emphasizing any particular perspective or using loaded language.

Official sources cited

  • government Supreme Court
Philippine Daily InquirerIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 8512 days ago
SC urged to decide BARMM petition after BTA’s ‘non-compliance’

A group called AMANA-BARMM has urged the Supreme Court of the Philippines to resolve a pending petition regarding the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM). The petition seeks to invalidate two laws related to parliamentary elections in the region. The group claims the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) has failed to comply with court-ordered submissions, and they argue that non-compliance should result in consequences. They emphasize the importance of respecting the court, upholding the rule of law, and ensuring the credibility of the planned 2026 BARMM parliamentary选举.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the positions of both the petitioners (AMANA-BARMM) and the BTA without overtly favoring either side. It reports on the legal dispute and the arguments made by both parties, maintaining neutrality in tone and framing.

Go to the primary sources (3)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.