Misuari, former governor of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, is under house arrest in New Manila, Quezon City for rebellion charges.
The DFA official, who declined to be named, said the government peace panel will push for the holding of the tripartite meeting in the Philippines in the preparatory talks with the OIC in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia this month.
Sayyed Kassem el-Masry, an Egyptian diplomat and adviser to the OIC secretary general, was expected to arrive in the country this week to finalize the details of the preliminary meeting but had to cancel his flight for medical reasons. Diplomatic sources said El-Masry would have met with Misuari had his Manila visit pushed through.
"We will wait for the court decision. It is possible he will be allowed to participate in the tripartite meeting if it will be held in the Philippines," the official said.
Last month, the government said it could not guarantee Misuari’s attendance in the tripartite meeting because of pending rebellion charges against him.
The government maintained that the OIC Committee of Eight, which is tasked to monitor the implementation of the 1996 peace agreement between the government and the MNLF, should play a lead role in the tripartite meeting.
"There’s no formal link with the OIC because we are not a member. And we are not an observer," another source said.
The government agreed to the holding a tripartite meeting but made clear that it would focus on the implementation of the second phase of the peace agreement. The government also maintained that the MNLF should represent all factions during the meeting.
In the meeting, sources said the government will also discuss the Feb.3 hostage-taking incident involving an MNLF faction led by Commander Habier Malik and government peace panel representatives led by Marine Maj. Gen. Benjamin Dolorfino in Camp Habanpuod, Panamao, Jolo, Sulu.
The peace panel representatives were released after the MNLF was assured that the tripartite meeting in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia would push through.