This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 43, December
4-10, 2005
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
Militants Blame GMA, AFP for
Killing of Church Worker, Union Leader
The killing of two activists
in Ilocos and Abra has brought to 150 the total number of politically-motivated
executions this year.
Kim Quitasol and A.T. Bengwayan
NORTHERN DISPATCH
Posted by Bulatlat
BAGUIO CITY—The city’s militant organizations,
joined by others from nearby Ilocos Sur and Abra provinces, held an indignation
rally here Nov. 30 to condemn the “political assassination” of Ilocos and
Cordillera Rural Missionaries Program coordinator Jose “Pepe” Manegdeg and Abra
human rights worker and union leader Albert Terredaño Nov. 28 and 29,
respectively.
Manegdeg was shot by an unidentified gunman in
Barangay (village) Apatot, San Esteban, Ilocos Sur on Nov. 28 at around 10 p.m.
Based on the autopsy report, he sustained 22 gunshot wounds from a .45 caliber
semi-automatic pistol that lacerated his lungs, liver, stomach and colon. He is
survived by his wife and children, aged nine and six.
Beverly Longid of the Cordillera Human Rights
Alliance (CHRA) said that before Manegdeg was shot, he just came from a
Paralegal Training Seminar at the Ursa Major Resort in Apatot, sponsored by the
Ilocos Human Rights Alliance (IHRA)-Karapatan, where he was a speaker-trainer.
Manegdeg’s remains were brought on Dec. 2 to his
hometown in Pagudpud, Ilocos Norte where he will be buried on Dec. 6. His
remains were earlier laid at the Baguio Church of the Resurrection, Twin Chapels
of the Risen Lord.
Meanwhile, unidentified gunmen aboard a
motorcycle shot Terredaño in front of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR)
building in Bangued, Abra at around 8:45 a.m. He died
at six hours later after battling for his life at the
Seares Memorial Hospital
in Bangued. His wife and two children survive him.
Terredaño sustained a single gunshot wound also
from a .45 semi automatic pistol that entered his chest and exited his right
armpit piercing his lungs.
Terredaño was also the president of the
Department of Agrarian Reform Employees Association (DAREA) and
main convener of the Provincial Organizing Committee
for the Confederation of Unity, Recognition and Advancement of Government
Employees (Courage)-Abra.
Militant organizations condemned the brutal
killings of Manegdeg and Terredaño and held the Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
government and the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) accountable for their
deaths, stressing that the incidents are not isolated in the nationwide spate of
killings against members of militant organizations. The deaths of Manegdeg and
Terredaño are but proof of the Arroyo regime’s mounting political repression
against the militant mass movement, and all those who criticize President
Macapagal-Arroyo’s anti-people policies, they added.
Longid stressed that the Arroyo administration
has done nothing to address the continuous political killings. She said, “GMA
has instead legalized the killings through her policies such as the
Anti-Terrorism Bill and her executive orders such as the calibrated preemptive
response (CPR).”
“In fact she (Macapagal-Arroyo) has promoted
Brig. Gen. Jovito Palparan despite his track record of human rights violations,”
Longid stressed.
In a separate statement, the Cordillera Peoples
Alliance (CPA) said that it has only been nine months since Romy Sanchez of
Bayan Muna (people first)-Ilocos and Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan or New
Patriotic Alliance)-Ilocos was assassinated in the Baguio City market, and
already another two human rights workers were slain by suspected military hitmen.
A tribute will be held for them in Baguio and
Abra this week. Northern Dispatch/Posted by Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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