Algerian-born hip-hop producer gives voice to Philippines’ Muslim south

Special Algerian-born hip-hop producer gives voice to Philippines’ Muslim south
The founder of Morobeats, DJ Medmessiah, performs in March 2020. (DJ Medmessiah)
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Updated 12 July 2024
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Algerian-born hip-hop producer gives voice to Philippines’ Muslim south

Algerian-born hip-hop producer gives voice to Philippines’ Muslim south
  • DJ Medmessiah draws influences from Mindanao heritage
  • Record label Morobeats is popular on Netflix, Spotify, YouTube 

MANILA: With a roster of young artists under his care, Mohammed Bansil wears several hats as a businessman, producer, and mentor to Filipino hip-hop talent — all of them combining into one main goal: giving voice to the Moro people and their narratives of the Philippines’ Muslim south.

Known as DJ Medmessiah, Bansil is the founder of Morobeats, the independent record label and musical collective, which also features his daughters, the new sensations on the Philippine hip-hop scene, Miss A and Fateeha.

The projects and collaborations Morobeats engages in get millions of views on Netflix, Spotify, or YouTube, but despite that, they do not comply with the hip-hop mainstream in which the genre is flooded with themes involving money and urban gangs.

“It’s fake. In this era, everyone is talking about how rich they are, how good or gangster they are, how aggressive they are. And for me, coming from Mindanao, it’s really corny,” Bansil told Arab News.

“I want something that has more substance.”

Morobeats’ distinctive sound and lyrics combine both hip-hop and influences from indigenous cultures of the Sulu and Mindanao islands in the southern Philippines — home to over a dozen Muslim-majority ethnolinguistic groups known as the Moro people. 

The music is heavy on the kulintang — the ancient gong and drum ensemble traditionally used in the region — and the rap verses are in Tausug, Maguindanao, and Chavacano, the local languages spoken in south-central Mindanao and Zamboanga Peninsula.

One of the viral songs, “Hunghang,” talks about greed, empty promises and not being fooled by propaganda.

“The only thing that it took was to have a good melody. And then you have 15 million people or 20 to 25 million that heard that music,” Bansil said.

But reaching such numbers cost him years of struggle and self-determination.

Born in Algeria to a Filipino Tausug-Maguindanao father and a Moroccan Algerian mother, he spent his childhood in France and then in the Muslim enclave of Maharlika village in Taguig, east of Metro Manila.

“The people that live there contribute to the Moro culture … you have people from the culture who pioneered the kulintangs and the Moro dances … we were watching Muslim dances, chants and all that,” Bansil said.

When his father was offered a job as a Shariah court judge, the family settled in Pagadian City, in Zamboanga, the very center of Moro Muslim culture and a region with a history of separatist violence.

This was where Bansil’s inclination for hip-hop came to the fore. He became a competitive drummer for his school’s drum and bugle band in Pagadian, an experience that he credits as the foundation for his beat-making.




DJ Medmessiah, center, is surrounded by his Morobeats hip-hop collective. (DJ Medmessiah)

He learned to rap in Zamboanga City, where the family moved in 1992 after his father’s death. As his mother ran a business selling textiles and merchandise, at the age of 15 he started to work as an MC at the city’s first club. There he would meet DJ Sonny of Mastaplann, a duo that ruled Filipino hip-hop in the 1990s.

When DJ Sonny told him to travel to Manila, Bansil packed his bags and flew there to hone his skills in rapping and producing music. He started developing his signature sound there, drawing from his percussive background and Zamboanga and Mindanao’s indigenous beats.

He struggled to break into Manila’s commercial music scene, as record companies considered his kulintang-heavy tracks and Tausug rap as good, but not sellable. Eventually he landed a record deal with a label that wanted him to do commercially viable reggaeton music, and he ended up producing a radio hit that even landed on one of the Philippines’ most popular noontime shows.

“But the thing was, that was not really the thing that I wanted to do, that kind of music. But I did that for survival,” he said. “Of course, that was 2004 (and) nobody would listen to Tausug rap or the Moro stuff.”

To provide for his young family after he got married, Bansil ran a halal fusion restaurant in Manila. It paid his bills so that finally, in 2014, he could start Morobeats to spread the kind of music that he wanted to do, and pave the way for the artists that he believed in.

“Do your best, do your thing. If you really deserve to get money, if you really deserve to get fame, then it will be there, it will follow. Don't make it the main reason why you’re doing music because you’re going to destroy your music,” he said.

“Consistency beats everything … When you put it in your mind, ‘Yes, I’m a Moro, I’m a unique guy, my sound is needed here,’ you’re the only one who can convince yourself. Your self-determination will take you anywhere.”

It took him to New York City in 2023, where Morobeats was featured on a huge Times Square billboard.

“If I can make it in New York Times Square, what about the next generation? I’m 46 and I made it there,” he said. “The young generation, they have the time.”

His plan for the young artists on his label is to stick to what they are doing without compromising. He believes hard work is the key, especially for Moro people who want to be heard.

“All these results or achievements, that’s all there. It’s like money. Money is everywhere, resources are everywhere. It’s just up to us how to get it. The only freedom that we have, I think, is in our discipline. If we don’t have that, we don’t have anything,” he said.

“The goal is to work hard. I hope my whole team sees it that way too.”


Russian attack on Ukrainian city of Kharkiv injures 11, governor says

Russian attack on Ukrainian city of Kharkiv injures 11, governor says
Updated 58 min 9 sec ago
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Russian attack on Ukrainian city of Kharkiv injures 11, governor says

Russian attack on Ukrainian city of Kharkiv injures 11, governor says
  • Kharkiv has been a frequent target of Russian attacks since the start of Moscow’s full-scale invasion in February 2022

KYIV: A Russian attack on the city of Kharkiv in northeastern Ukraine injured at least 11 people on Tuesday, including a child, regional officials said.
Governor Oleh Syniehubov said via the Telegram messaging app that the attack had damaged infrastructure and the authorities were working to verify the type of weapon used.
He and Kharkiv mayor Ihor Terekhov said it was likely that a civilian production facility had been hit. Terekhov said a fire had broken out.
Located 30km from the border with Russia, Kharkiv has been a frequent target of Russian attacks since the start of Moscow’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
Last week, a Russian guided bomb attack on the city struck a five-story apartment block, inuring 10 people, local officials said.


German court acquits McCann suspect of unrelated sexual offense charges

German court acquits McCann suspect of unrelated sexual offense charges
Updated 08 October 2024
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German court acquits McCann suspect of unrelated sexual offense charges

German court acquits McCann suspect of unrelated sexual offense charges
  • German national, who has been identified by local media as Christian Brueckner, acquitted of two counts of rape and two of sexual abuse
  • Prosecutors had argued he should be given a 15-year prison sentence and kept in preventive detention once he has served it

BRAUNSCHWEIG, Germany: A German court on Tuesday acquitted a man who is also under investigation in the 2007 disappearance of British toddler Madeleine McCann in a trial on charges of unrelated sexual offenses.
The Braunschweig state court acquitted the 47-year-old German national, who has been identified by local media as Christian Brueckner, of two counts of rape and two of sexual abuse.
However, Brueckner will remain in prison another year because he is still serving a seven-year sentence for rape in a different case, German news agency dpa reported.
Brueckner had been on trial since February over offenses he is alleged to have committed in Portugal between 2000 and 2017. Defense lawyers had pointed to what they labeled a lack of evidence and witnesses who weren’t credible, and suggested he might not have been charged if he hadn’t also been a suspect in the McCann case.
Prosecutors had argued he should be given a 15-year prison sentence and kept in preventive detention once he has served it.
The verdict can be appealed, dpa reported.
Brueckner has not been charged in the McCann case, in which he is under investigation on suspicion of murder. He spent many years in Portugal, including in the resort of Praia da Luz around the time of Madeleine’s disappearance there in 2007. He has denied any involvement in her disappearance.
He is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence after being convicted in 2019 by the Braunschweig court for the rape of a 72-year-old American woman in Portugal in 2005.
The Braunschweig state court has jurisdiction because Brueckner had his last German residence in that city in Lower Saxony.


Over 1,000 evacuated from Crimea oil terminal fire: mayor

Over 1,000 evacuated from Crimea oil terminal fire: mayor
Updated 08 October 2024
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Over 1,000 evacuated from Crimea oil terminal fire: mayor

Over 1,000 evacuated from Crimea oil terminal fire: mayor

MOSCOW: Over 1,000 residents have been evacuated due to a fire at a large oil terminal in Russian-annexed Crimea, a local official said Tuesday, after Ukraine claimed it had struck the depot.
Kyiv has ramped up strikes targeting Russia’s energy sector in recent months, aiming to dent revenues used by Moscow to fund its invasion, now grinding through its third year.
Ukraine said Monday its forces had carried out a “successful strike” on an offshore oil terminal overnight in Feodosia.
Russian-installed authorities in Crimea then said a fire had broken out at the depot in the Black Sea port town of some 70,000 people and that there were no casualties.
Russia has not said there was a Ukrainian strike on the terminal.
“To ensure the safety of people living near the scene of the emergency situation, 1,047 people have been temporarily evacuated to shelters,” the Russian-appointed mayor of the town of Feodosia, Igor Tkachenko, wrote on Telegram.
On Monday, the fire caused road and train closures, but the Russian consumer safety watchdog said Monday initial checks did not find excess levels of air pollution.
The watchdog said the fire was raging at the Sea Oil Terminal, whose website says it “stores fuel in case of emergency situations and ensures Crimea’s energy security.”
The fire has spread to “up to 2,500 square meters, a source in the emergency services told RIA Novosti news agency Tuesday.
“The Feodosia terminal is the largest in Crimea in terms of transshipment of oil products, which were used, among other things, to meet the needs of the Russian occupation army,” the Ukrainian military said, vowing to continue such attacks.
Ukraine insists such strikes are fair retaliation for Russian attacks on its own energy infrastructure that have plunged millions into darkness.


Votes are being counted in the election for a truncated government in Indian-controlled Kashmir

Votes are being counted in the election for a truncated government in Indian-controlled Kashmir
Updated 08 October 2024
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Votes are being counted in the election for a truncated government in Indian-controlled Kashmir

Votes are being counted in the election for a truncated government in Indian-controlled Kashmir
  • A final result is expected to be declared later Tuesday by the region’s electoral office
  • Nearly 8.9 million people were eligible to vote in the election that began on Sept. 18 and concluded on Oct. 1

SRINAGAR, India: Votes were being counted Tuesday in the recent election for a largely powerless local government in Indian-controlled Kashmir, the first since Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government stripped the disputed region of its special status five years ago.
Thousands of additional police and paramilitary soldiers patrolled roads and guarded 28 counting centers as officials tallied votes. A final result was expected to be declared later Tuesday by the region’s electoral office.
Nearly 8.9 million people were eligible to vote in the election that began on Sept. 18 and concluded on Oct. 1. The overall turnout was 64 percent across the three phases, according to official data.
It was first such vote in a decade and the first since Modi’s Hindu nationalist government scrapped the Muslim-majority region’s long-held semi-autonomy in 2019.
The unprecedented move downgraded and divided the former state into two centrally governed union territories, Ladakh and Jammu-Kashmir. Both are ruled directly by New Delhi through its appointed administrators along with unelected bureaucrats and security setup. The move — which largely resonated in India and among Modi supporters — was mostly opposed in Kashmir as an assault on its identity and autonomy amid fears that it would pave way for demographic changes in the region.
The region has since been on edge with civil liberties curbed and media gagged.
India and Pakistan each administer a part of Kashmir, but both claim the territory in its entirety. The nuclear-armed rivals have fought two of their three wars over the territory since they gained independence from British colonial rule in 1947.
Early results may give an indication of the vote’s direction. However, exit polls by major television channels in last two days projected the regional National Conference emerging as a single largest party followed by the Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party. Such mandate is likely to be seen as a referendum against Modi’s 2019 move.
The National Conference fought the election in alliance with India’s main opposition Congress party.
Their coalition may still need support of some seats to form the government, that is likely to come from Peoples Democratic Party, another Kashmiri group. Five seats are appointed and 90 elected, so a party or coalition would need at least 48 of the 95 total seats to form a government.
The vote will allow Kashmir to have its own truncated government and a regional legislature, called an assembly, rather than being directly under New Delhi’s rule.
However, there will be a limited transition of power from New Delhi to the assembly as Kashmir will remain a “union territory” — directly controlled by the federal government — with India’s Parliament as its main legislator. Kashmir’s statehood must be restored for the new government to have powers similar to other states of India.
The region’s last assembly election was held in 2014, after which the BJP for the first time ruled in a coalition with the local Peoples Democratic Party. But the government collapsed in 2018, after the BJP withdrew from the coalition.
Polls in the past have been marked with violence, boycotts and vote-rigging, even though India called them a victory over separatism.
Militants in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi’s rule since 1989. Many Muslim Kashmiris support the rebels’ goal of uniting the territory, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.
India insists the Kashmir militancy is Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge, and many Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.


Son of Osama bin Laden deported from France, barred from returning

Son of Osama bin Laden deported from France, barred from returning
Updated 08 October 2024
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Son of Osama bin Laden deported from France, barred from returning

Son of Osama bin Laden deported from France, barred from returning
  • Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said he had signed an order banning Omar Binladin from France

PARIS: A son of Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden has been deported from France, where he lived for years painting landscapes in a Normandy village, and barred from returning after posting comments on social media deemed to have glorified terrorism.
Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said he had signed an order banning Omar Binladin from France, and that Binladin had previously been deported. He gave no details about the timing of the deportation or where Binladin had been sent.
“Mr Binladin, who has lived in the Orne region for several years as the spouse of a British national, posted comments on his social networks in 2023 that glorified terrorism,” Retailleau said on X.
“The administrative ban ensures that Mr.Binladin cannot return to France for any reason whatsoever.”
Binladin could not immediately be reached for comment.
According to local weekly newspaper Le Publicateur Libre, Binladin caught the attention of French authorities over a social media post on the birthday of his father, who was killed by US forces in 2011. Reuters was not immediately able to locate the social media post.
The paper reported in July 2023 that police had searched for Binladen in the village of Domfort, Normandy.