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Basilan residents embark on 'Tennun' festival to attract investors

COTABATO CITY— Residents of the now markedly peaceful Basilan are optimistic that their weeklong Tennun Pakaradjaan 2024 Festival launched on Tuesday will attract investors from outside to venture into capital-intensive projects in the province.

Basilan and two other island provinces, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, are touted as the new investment hubs in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

The Tennun Pakaradjaan 2024 Festival, highlighting the Yakan handwoven Tennun fabric that islanders value as centuries-old icon of their identity as a community, is part of the commemoration of the 50th founding anniversary of the creation of Basilan province that started as Basilan City about three decades prior.

“There is no question about Basilan being labelled now as one of the new investment hubs in the Bangsamoro region. Indeed, it is,” Mohammad Omar Pasigan, chairman of the Bangsamoro Board of Investments, or BBOI, told reporters on Thursday.

President Ferdinand Marcos Sr. created Basilan province in 1974 via a presidential order, then covering only seven municipalities, Isabela, Lantawan, Maluso, Sumisip, Lamitan Tipo-Tipo and Tuburan. It now has 11 towns and two cities, Isabela and Lamitan, as a component-province of BARMM.

Provincial and municipal officials led by Gov. Hadjiman Hataman Salliman, Brig. Gen. Alvin Luzon of the Army’s 101st Infantry Brigade and Col. Carlos  Madronio led Tuesday’s launching of the Tennun festival.

The festival showcases how residents of Basilan patronize the Tennun cloth that experts weave using wooden hand looms and how the local government units and local business blocs are sustaining the industry via essential technical and fiscal interventions.

The seven-day event’s symbolic start was capped off with a caravan of more than a hundred vehicles, carrying political, religious and traditional leaders and representatives from the Yakan, Sama and Tausug communities, that motored through the Basilan circumferential highway, straddling through barangays that were once bastions of the Abu Sayyaf group, now “peace zones,” where former terrorists are thriving as farmers and fishermen.

Reports obtained on Wednesday from the Bangsamoro

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