Among those present in the day-long MNLF assembly at the Cotabato City State Polytechnic College were Melham Alam, Abebakerin Lucman and Sahirin Bahjin, leaders of the Islamic Command Council, and more than a thousand members of the Mutallah Force, the fronts remaining unit loyal to Misuari.
Members of the Council of 15, composed of pioneer MNLF leaders, including Cotabato City Mayor Muslimim Sema and Sulu Gov. Yusoph Jikiri, unseated Misuari as the fronts chairman last April 29 due to what they claimed was loss of trust and confidence.
Dozens of MNLF leaders took turns in criticizing Misuari during the assembly and urged President Arroyo to order an extensive audit of state funds channeled to the ARMM government, before the holding of the plebiscite for expanded Mindanao autonomy.
Jikiri, the MNLFs chief of staff, said while it was painful for them to bid goodbye to Misuari, their leader for almost four decades, they have no way but to install a new central leadership to rebuild what he described as the MNLFs "badly devastated image" and to introduce reforms in its ranks.
Alano Bansawan, chairman of the fronts Sebangan Kutawato State Revolutionary Committee, said the MNLF members who pledged support for the Council of 15 yesterday were mostly farmers and former combatants long griping over Misuaris failure to give them livelihood projects and jobs.
Sema, secretary-general of the MNLF, said the council is now gaining headway in its efforts to forge ties with foreign governments, including member-countries of the Organization of Islamic Conference, which helped broker the Sept. 2, 1996 government-MNLF peace agreement. John Unson