Many governments have issued warnings against all travel to this region because of terrorist activity and clashes between the military and insurgent groups.
Zamboanga Peninsula is on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines.
The peninsula is divided into three parts:
This region has a Christian majority, in contrast to the Muslim majority in neighboring Bangsamoro (formerly the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao or ARMM). Most people either speak Cebuano or Chavacano (a Spanish-based creole).
Zamboanga Peninsula is rather a poor region, but it has a booming export-oriented economy. Major industries are agriculture, fishing, forestry, and mining. Zamboanga City is known for its canned sardine production.
The first inhabitants on Zamboanga Peninsula are the Subanon people, an animist ethnic group. Part of the peninsula became Muslim after an invasion by the Sultanate of Sulu. The Spanish arrived in 1569, and became an important outpost to protect the rest of the Philippines from Muslim marauders. The Spaniards faced constant war from the Muslim Filipino (Moro) pirates and warriors. While many towns still have heritage churches, many are repeatedly damaged or destroyed by the marauding Muslims.
At the final stages of the Philippine Revolution, where the Americans invaded the Philippines, Zamboanga was a short-lived republic, which was eventually annexed into the rest of Mindanao, as part of the Moro Province under the American colonial government. Zamboanga became a separate province as the Moro Province is renamed into the Mindanao and Sulu department.
Zamboanga province, which included the provinces of Sulu Archipelago, composed the region of Western Mindanao until the formation of the ARMM in 1988. The province has since been split up into three provinces retaining "Zamboanga" in their name, while Zamboanga City became an independent city. Isabela City remains part of Zamboanga Peninsula administratively, while surrounding Basilan joined an expanded ARMM.
Zamboanga Region used to the called Western Mindanao until it was officially renamed in 2015. The regional center has been transferred to Pagadian, which is to the ire of Zamboanga City's locals. That said, Zamboanga City has a more developed economy and a vibrant tourism scene.
Most of the people in Zamboanga Peninsula descend from Visayan migrants, and speak Cebuano (Bisaya), except in Zamboanga, where the Zamboangueño ethnic group are the majority. Zamboangueños are a result of intermarriage between Spaniards and the Austronesian peoples; they speak the creole language Chavacano and take pride on their Spanish ancestry and Spanish-based culture.
Zamboanga Peninsula is the ancestral homeland for the Subanen people, one of the Lumad indigenous peoples. They used to inhabit most of the region until Visayan migrations turned them to a minority mostly concentrated in Zamboanga del Norte. The Subanen have an approximate population of 500,000; they are mostly Christians, but about 3% converted to Islam and call themselves the Kalibugan. The Subanen also hold ancestral land claims on much of what is now Northern Mindanao.
Poverty is widespread in the region, with Zamboanga del Norte the poorest.
Cebuano (or Bisaya) is the major language spoken in the Zamboanga Peninsula, but Chavacano, a Spanish creole, is also spoken, most particularly in Zamboanga City.
Zamboanga International Airport, 6.9198°, 122.0625°. (IATA: ZAM) is the main port of entry, but despite its name, there are no international flights, except for short-lived services from Sabah in Malaysia. The provincial capitals of Zamboanga del Norte and Zamboanga del Sur, Pagadian (IATA: PAG) and Dipolog (IATA: DPL), respectively, has smaller airports, served by daily flights from Manila, Cebu, Jolo and Tawi Tawi.
Rural Transit connects most cities and provincial capitals in Zamboanga from Cagayan de Oro.
From the Visayas, Ceres Liner has a bus from Cebu City to Zamboanga City. From Luzon, Ceres Transport has a bus to Zamboanga City from Manila via Iloilo City, Bacolod, Dumaguete, and Dipolog. Those take the ferry between Dumaguete and Dapitan.
Zamboanga (Ferry) Port, 6.90063°, 122.07667°. is served by ferries from Luzon and the Sulu islands, and internationally, from Sandakan in Malaysia. Dapitan has frequent ferries from Dumaguete and Cebu.
Asian Highway 26 enters Zamboanga from Lanao del Sur in the Bangsamoro region. Rtes 9 and 79 connect the region from Northern Mindanao. There are also RORO ferries from Dumaguete in Negros to Dapitan in Zamboanga del Norte.
The primary way of travel across Zamboanga is by bus. Red Rural Transit buses practically serve much of the region, with frequent departures from Zamboanga City, Pagadian and Dipolog. Most other towns mostly only have bus service from smaller companies running ordinary non-AC buses.
UV Express vans are abundant, but in a lot of cases they are unmarked and unlicensed.
Jeepneys are available in Zamboanga City, but elsewhere, tricycles are the only way around, with jeepneys primarily used for trips to nearby towns
Visitors to Zamboanga Peninsula tend to have Zamboanga City at the top of their minds, but there are many hidden attractions waiting to be explored
The Philippine national hero, Jose Rizal, lived in exile at Dapitan after being arrested by the Spaniards for his revolutionary activities. Dapitan, a city since the 1960s, has a Spanish-era downtown, with a city square Rizal has designed. The hut where he once lived on is now a shrine.
Dipolog, the capital of Zamboanga del Norte, has an American-era city hall which replicates the town hall in Maribojoc, Bohol, and a waterfront boulevard, once littered but now clean.
Many rural municipalities have hidden natural sights.
While Zamboanga Peninsula is Christian-dominated, there remains risks from the spillover of the insurgency in Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. In 2013, Zamboanga City was sieged by the then-insurgent Moro National Liberation Front. Chances of a terrorist attack remain low elsewhere, but likely in areas bordering ARMM.