The town was part of the province of Shariff Kabunsuan from October 2006 until its nullification by the Supreme Court in July 2008.
History
Establishment and territorial changes
Buldon was established through Republic Act No. 3419, approved on June 18, 1961, when twelve barrios and twenty sitios of Parang, then part of Cotabato, were separated. The seat of government was designated at Barrio Nabalawag.[5]
In 1977, through Presidential Decree No. 1188, part of its territory was constituted into a separate municipality of Barira, with eastern parts of barangays Nabalawag and Tugaig remained part of the mother municipality.[6]
Former Huk members mainly composed the migrants who later inhabited in present-day Buldon, as well as in Parang and other Muslim-dominated towns in Mindanao.[7] The Economic Development Corporation, at the time of its establishment in 1951 by then-PresidentRamon Magsaysay, opened two resettlement areas for them, both administered first by the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Gallego was turned over to the Land Authority in 1976; same as another, Barira, to the Department of Agrarian Reform in 1972, prior to becoming part of the municipality of Barira.[8]
The municipality was among the sites of hostilities since early 1970s,[10] and even during negotiations between the national government and the MILF in the late 1990s.[11] The first recorded encounters occurred in Barangay Garigayan, where Bangon Aratuc led the Moro separatists in clashes with the Philippine Constabulary for more than a month, displacing thousands of civilians in the municipality.[12]
In August 1971, a battle occurred in the town between Muslim armed bands, the Blackshirts, and the constabulary. This was settled through a peace pact between a team of government negotiators and the Muslims, which also led to receiving aid for rehabilitation projects.[10] The Christian–Moro conflict was addressed in the 1980s, during the mayorship of Macarampat Manalao.[13]
1997 peace agreement
Buldon was the site of the first phase of ceasefire which was declared for the municipality through what would be the first agreement signed by both panels, on January 27, 1997,[14] which was eventually elevated to a general ceasefire for Mindanao[15][16] upon signing of the Buldon Ceasefire Agreement in July 27,[15][16][17] although negotiations were left unfinished within the presidency of Fidel Ramos.[17] However, before negotiating panels from both sides were to conduct peace talks,[17][18] on January 16, the rebels fired at the military unit which escorting mayor Manalao, who attempted to visit the municipality where he had never held office since 1995, in Garigayan, as the latter reportedly entered the MILF defense perimeter at Camp Abubakar,[19] leaving 22 people, including two soldiers, dead.[20][21] Thereafter, clashes erupted in Barangays Kabayuan and Garigayan,[22] and ended when a local agreement was eventually signed.[18][19][23] At least 33 were killed from both sides.[22][24]
On March 16, eleven people were killed in a shelling of an Islamic school by the Philippine Army.[25] On June 19–20, 80 heavily-armed members of the MILF launched an attack, government troops later retaliated. Among the casualties were a soldier and several guerillas.[26] Clashes also occurred in Upper Minabay in 1998.[11]
After a ceasefire agreement was signed by both sides in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in August 2001, on September 27, however, a hundred MILF fighters stormed a vacant military outpost; clashes with government troops followed, killing eight army soldiers and up to 36 MILF members.[28]
Geography
Barangays
Buldon is politically subdivided into 15 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks while some have sitios.
^Hermoso, Dickson (July–October 2007). "GRP–MILF Peace Process: Review and Prospects". Autonomy and Peace Review. Vol. 3. Institute for Autonomy and Governance; Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. p. 61. Retrieved April 12, 2024 – via Calameo.