This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 11, April 24-30, 2005
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
Defending the Lawyers
Just like journalists, lawyers
are now considered an endangered species. Bulatlat got an exclusive interview
with a human rights lawyer who was shot eight times in broad daylight. The
increasing number of killed lawyers prompted the Integrated Bar of the
Philippines and various lawyers’ groups to not just condemn the killings but
also to do something about the situation. BY DABET CASTAÑEDA He read the day’s newspaper, checked his
students’ notebooks and signed various legal documents to be submitted to court
the next day. If not for a small waste bag attached to his stomach and the
hospital bed where he lay, the suite at an undisclosed hospital in Metro Manila
could have been mistaken for a law office. The patient, lawyer Charles Juloya, 42, has
been kept under tight security after he survived an assassination attempt last
March 22 in Aringay, La Union, 244 kms north of Manila. In the past, he refused
to talk to the media about what happened. However, after almost a month of
recuperating in the hospital, Juloya granted this exclusive interview to
Bulatlat. “Pumapayat pero okay lang
(getting thin but doing okay)” was how he described himself a month after a lone
gunman tried to kill him just across his law office in Aringay. At high noon last March 22 as he parked his
car beside a carinderia (food stop), Juloya said an assassin armed with a
.38 caliber pistol approached him and shot him eight times, hitting his right
leg and abdomen. With blood oozing from his body, he said
that he ran toward a sidewalk canal for cover while looking at his assassin who
walked away casually. The assassin crossed the busy national highway and faded
into the crowd as he went toward the public market. The police response was late, he said, even
if there was an outpost 15 meters away from the scene of the crime. Barangay
(village) officials were also not there as the Barangay Hall, according to a
witness, was closed that day. It was his secretary and some bystanders who
brought him to the hospital, he recalled. Although Juloya alleged that his political
opponents were behind his failed assassination, a group of concerned lawyers who
compose the Preparatory Committee of the campaign for the defense of lawyers
expressed concern over the recent attacks against their colleagues. Juloya was attacked eight days after another
lawyer, Felidito Dacut from Tacloban, Leyte (Eastern Visayas), was shot to death
by unidentified men. Both lawyers handled human rights cases and labor disputes
pro bono (free of charge). It may be recalled that human rights lawyer
and United Nations judge Romeo Capulong experienced harassments and a failed
assassination while in his hometown in Nueva Ecija on March 9. The International
Association of People’s Lawyers (IAPL), in a statement last March 29, said that
the attempt on his life may be linked, among others, to his role as senior
counsel of the striking workers of the country’s largest sugar estate, Hacienda
Luisita in Tarlac City (125 kms north of Manila). The most heinous attack in recent years, the
group of concerned lawyers said, was the ambush-slaying of lawyer Juvy Magsino,
vice mayor of Naujan, Mindoro Oriental “whose public interest lawyering caught
the ire of the military.” In a forum sponsored by the Pro-People Law
Network (PLN) on April 18 at the University of the Philippines College of Law,
Atty. Neri Javier Colmenares said these series of attacks send a chilling effect
on lawyers. “These completely paralyze the lawyers and
the causes they choose to defend,” he said. Colmenares is a human rights lawyer
and a political prisoner for four years under Martial Law. The attacks on lawyers are nothing new as
shown by the list of lawyers whose rights were violated. Documents from the Free
Legal Assistance Group (FLAG) showed that 11 lawyers were murdered from 1984 to
1992. This included labor lawyer and leader Rolando Olalia in 1986. In 2004, two lawyers of the Public
Attorney’s Office were killed while two judges, Tanaun Regional Trial Court (RTC)
Judge Voltaire Rosales and Tabuk RTC Judge Milnar Lammawin, were also killed
last year. In the same forum, Dean Pacifico Agabin of
the Lyceum College of Law said the attacks against them are also attacks on
civil liberties. “The Macapagal- Arroyo administration is developing a culture
of ignoring civil liberties,” he said. Among the distinct threats to civil
liberties, he said, is the surveillance of the so-called “enemies of the state”
as listed by the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) in a slide presentation
titled “Knowing the Enemy.” The list of so-called enemies included media
organizations National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) and the
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ); church groups like the
Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP); lawyers groups like the
FLAG; rightist soldiers’ group and veterans groups; peasant and labor groups;
and progressive party-list groups. Since the start of the year, four
journalists have been killed while two were wounded in assassination attempts.
Priests belonging to the Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI or Independent
Church of the Philippines) in the province of Tarlac have been reportedly listed
in the military’s “Order of Battle” since 2004 and have been experiencing
harassment to this day after Fr. William Tadena was killed last March 13.
Agabin also said that the AFP and the
Philippine National Police (PNP) have been instrumental in curtailing civil
liberties. He noted that the PNP admitted setting up around 3,000 wiretaps from
1999 to 2001 which included various journalists and leaders of people’s
organizations. The Intelligence Services of the AFP (ISAFP)
is, in fact, mandated by law to conduct surveillance and information gathering
activities about perceived and actual threats to national security, he said.
“Of course, lawyers among us know that these
surveillance operations are a blatant violation of the guarantee against
unreasonable searches and seizures in the Constitution, including the privacy to
communication and correspondence,” he said. He added that even if Congress has long
repealed the anti-subversion law, a number of left-leaning organizations were
put on surveillance, and their leaders have been assassinated. Since the start of the year, the human
rights group Karapatan (Alliance for the Advancement of Peoples’ Rights) has
documented 32 cases of politically-motivated killings and five cases of
involuntary disappearances. The recent developments have propelled
experienced lawyers, young lawyers who have just passed the Bar Exams and law
students to close ranks to campaign for the defense of lawyers. They have recently filed a resolution to the
IBP National Convention held in Baguio City this week that called on the IBP to
condemn the attacks against lawyers, or any unarmed dissenters. According to
them, these attacks violate human rights and are threats to the practice of law.
The resolution also encouraged the IBP members to render assistance in the
investigation of these attacks. In response, incoming IBP President Leonard
de Vera said that he will make it imperative for the IBP to field in two to
three full-time lawyers for every lawyer or journalist killed. In reaction, Juloya said the initiatives are
a good start. “Lawyers are becoming victims. Dapat lang i-defend nila ang
sarili nila (It is necessary that they defend themselves),” he said. After his third operation on April 21, he
was told he could go home after five days. Despite the continuous threats to his
life, he said he hopes to get back to full-time lawyering in June.
Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
BulatlatThe lawyer’s account
Chilling effect
Threats to civil liberties
In defense