MANILA, Philippines 鈥 The idea that he would need a visa just to visit his grandchildren in Batangas is making Senator Ronald Dela Rosa think twice about having an independent Mindanao.
Hence, for now, dela Rosa said he is not supporting the 鈥渟eparate and independent鈥 Mindanao proposal of his ally, former President Rodrigo Duterte.
Both the senator, who was police chief during the early part of the Duterte administration, and Duterte hail from Mindanao.
鈥淥n my part, personally, right now I don鈥檛 want to because I don鈥檛 want to get a visa if I go. I will visit my grandchildren here in Batangas,鈥 dela Rosa said, speaking partly in Filipino, when asked if he is in favor of the 鈥淥ne Mindanao鈥 proposal.
鈥淔rom Davao, lilipad ako dito. Kukuha pa ako ng visa dahil ibang bansa na pala itong Luzon at saka Visayas,鈥澛 he added during an interview at the Senate on Tuesday.
(From Davao, I will fly here. I will have to get a visa because it turns out that Luzon and Visayas are already different countries.)
Dela Rosa surmised that proponents of One Mindanao were just sending a message that they would be forced to encourage a separate state if pushed to the wall.
READ: Duterte now wants 鈥榮eparate, independent鈥 Mindanao
However, he said he is almost certain that One Mindanao movers will not use violence just to push for it.
鈥If they separate, maybe they have their own legal plans to do it not by use of force, not through violence,鈥 he said.
In the end, dela Rosa said the decision on whether or not to have a separate state would still be up to the people of聽 Mindanao.
鈥淎s we always say, supremacy resides on聽 the people,鈥 he said.
鈥淓h kung sabihin ng mga tao doon na gusto na naming maghiwalay (If the people there say that we want to separate) through peaceful means, through legal means then, gawin nila 鈥榶un kung ano gusto nilang gawin, nararapat nilang gawin (let them do what they want to do, what they should do),鈥 he said.