If you grew up in Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur, Basilan, Sulu, or Tawi-Tawi, your region has had a complicated relationship with Manila for decades. The autonomous region was created to give Bangsamoro people more control over their own lives — their culture, their education, their governance.
RA 9054 was the law that expanded that autonomy in 2001. Understanding it means understanding the legal history of the Bangsamoro people's struggle for self-governance.
ELI5 (Explain It Like I'm 5): RA 9054 gave the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) its own regional government with real powers — its own assembly, its own governor, control over regional laws. But it was still part of the Philippines. National laws and the Constitution still applied. In 2019, ARMM was replaced by BARMM under RA 11054, but understanding RA 9054 helps explain how we got there.
Real Filipino Scenario
Hadja Fatima, a 44-year-old school principal in Cotabato City, had been watching the political changes in her region for years. When ARMM was abolished and replaced by BARMM in 2019, many teachers, employees, and officials in her district were confused about what would change and what rights they still had.
She dug into the legal history. She found that RA 9054 (the Expanded Organic Act) had given ARMM the power to create regional laws on education, tax, and governance since 2001. But the ARMM government had struggled with implementation, corruption allegations, and conflict. The BARMM transition was designed to give the Bangsamoro people a fresh start with a stronger, more accountable autonomous government.
Understanding RA 9054 helped Hadja Fatima explain to her teachers why their civil service status, salaries, and DepEd positions were protected during the transition — because both RA 9054 and RA 11054 contained provisions protecting civil servants' tenure and benefits.
What the Law Actually Says
Section 1 — Part of the Republic: The ARMM remains an integral and inseparable part of the Philippines. Autonomy does not mean independence — national laws, the Constitution, and the national government's sovereignty still apply.
Territorial Coverage: The ARMM under RA 9054 covered: the provinces of Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur, Basilan, Sulu, and Tawi-Tawi, and the City of Marawi. (Note: Under subsequent plebiscites and the BARMM transition, coverage was adjusted.)
Regional Assembly: The ARMM had a Regional Assembly — an elected legislative body with the power to pass regional laws on matters within the autonomous region's authority. Think of it like a mini-Congress for the region.
Regional Governor: An elected Regional Governor served as the chief executive of the ARMM, similar to a provincial governor but with regional authority.
Powers Given to the Regional Government (Key Areas):
- Education — ARMM could set regional curricula supplementing national standards
- Taxation — The Regional Assembly could pass a regional tax code (Section 3 of the regional tax provisions)
- Agriculture and fisheries — Management of regional agricultural resources
- Health and social services — Regional health programs
- Islamic institutions — Recognition of Shari'a law and Islamic courts for personal and family matters of Muslims
Shari'a Law: RA 9054 recognized the application of Shari'a law in personal status, family, and property relations among Muslims in ARMM. This is a significant recognition of Muslim legal tradition within the Philippine legal system.
Section 9 — Preferential Rights for Inhabitants: The regional government must create livelihood programs, job opportunities, and preferential rights for the inhabitants of the autonomous region — recognizing the historical economic marginalization of Muslim Mindanao.
Section 15 — Fundamental Rights: People in ARMM enjoy all rights under the Philippine Constitution, the Geneva Convention, the UN Charter, and international human rights law.
Limitations: The ARMM's autonomy was not absolute. National defense, foreign affairs, national economic policy, and constitutional matters remained with the national government.
RA 9054 and BARMM: RA 9054 was eventually superseded by RA 11054 (Bangsamoro Organic Law of 2018), which abolished ARMM and created the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) with a new structure and stronger governance provisions. The BARMM officially took effect in 2019.
What This Means for You
If you live in or come from the former ARMM provinces (now BARMM), this law shaped your regional government for nearly two decades.
For civil servants who worked under ARMM, your tenure was protected during the transition to BARMM — you were not automatically terminated when BARMM took over.
For Muslims in the region, the recognition of Shari'a law in personal and family matters under RA 9054 (and continued under BARMM) means your marriage, inheritance, and family disputes may be handled by Shari'a courts rather than regular civil courts.
For all Filipinos, understanding ARMM and its successor BARMM matters for understanding the peace process, federalism debates, and the Philippines' commitment to addressing historical grievances in Mindanao.
What Most Filipinos Get Wrong
"ARMM was separatist — it wanted to break away from the Philippines." Hindi totoo. RA 9054 explicitly states that ARMM is an integral and inseparable part of the Republic of the Philippines. Autonomy is not independence. The Bangsamoro peace process is about better governance within the Philippines, not secession.
"Shari'a law in ARMM means Islamic criminal penalties apply." Mali. Shari'a courts in the Philippines have jurisdiction over personal status, family law, and property matters among Muslims — not criminal penalties like those in some other countries. Philippine criminal law applies to all residents, Muslim or not.
"ARMM is still the official name." Outdated. ARMM was officially replaced by BARMM (Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao) in 2019 under RA 11054. RA 9054 is part of the legal history, not current law.
"The ARMM Organic Act doesn't affect non-Muslims in the region." Partly wrong. The ARMM governed all residents of its provinces — Muslim, Christian, and Lumad — though some provisions were specifically for Muslim Filipinos. All residents had the same national constitutional rights.
What to Do If Your Rights Are Affected
- For civil servants in BARMM: If you have concerns about your tenure, salary, or status after the ARMM-to-BARMM transition, contact the Bangsamoro Civil Service Commission or the national Civil Service Commission (CSC) at csc.gov.ph.
- For Shari'a court matters (family law, inheritance): Contact the Shari'a Circuit Courts or Shari'a District Courts in your province. The Office of the Court Administrator can direct you to the appropriate Shari'a court.
- For general governance concerns in BARMM: The Bangsamoro Government operates under the BARMM structure. Visit or contact the Bangsamoro Information Office.
- For human rights concerns in conflict-affected areas: The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) has a regional office in the BARMM area.
- For legal assistance: Contact the Public Attorney's Office (PAO) at 1-800-10-PAO-8888 for free legal help.
Related Laws
- RA 11054 (Bangsamoro Organic Law, 2018) — Replaced RA 9054 and created BARMM
- PD 1083 (Code of Muslim Personal Laws, 1977) — Governs family law and personal status for Muslims; still in effect
- RA 7160 (Local Government Code) — Applies suppletorily to local governments within BARMM
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is RA 9054 still the law governing Muslim Mindanao? No. RA 9054 was superseded by RA 11054 (the Bangsamoro Organic Law) in 2018. BARMM replaced ARMM in 2019. However, understanding RA 9054 is important for historical context and for ongoing legal matters that began under the ARMM era.
Q: I am a Christian living in Cotabato Province. Does the Bangsamoro law apply to me? The BARMM government governs all residents of the Bangsamoro region regardless of religion. All residents enjoy the same constitutional rights. Certain provisions about Islamic institutions apply specifically to Muslim residents.
Q: My family's land documents were issued under the ARMM government. Are they still valid? In general, titles and documents issued by legitimate ARMM government offices during their authority are valid. However, if there are disputes or concerns about specific documents, consult the Registry of Deeds in your province and, if needed, a licensed Filipino lawyer.
Sources
- Republic Act No. 9054 (2001): https://lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra2001/ra_9054_2001.html
Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information only and is not legal advice. For concerns about governance, civil service, or legal matters in the Bangsamoro region, consult the relevant government agencies or the Public Attorney's Office (PAO) at 1-800-10-PAO-8888.