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
ANALYSIS
VFA: A Threat
to All Filipinos
The Philippines hosts United
States soldiers allegedly tasked with training their counterparts in the
Philippine Armed Forces. Six of these soldiers are accused of raping a 22-year
old Filipina—an event that has correctly provoked questions on the wisdom of the
Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA).
By Center for People Empowerment in Governance
Posted
by Bulatlat
The Philippines hosts United States (U.S.)
soldiers allegedly tasked with training their counterparts in the Philippine
Armed Forces. Six of these soldiers are accused of raping a 22-year old
Filipina—an event that has correctly provoked questions on the wisdom of the
Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA).
The Philippine Senate rejected the proposed
extension of the terms of the 1947 Military Bases Agreement in 1991. The
presence of U.S. troops in the Philippines and their involvement in training and
war exercises are supposedly authorized by the VFA, or, as it is officially
known, the "Agreement between the Government of the Republic of the Philippines
and the Government of the United States of America Regarding the Treatment of
United States Armed Forces Visiting the Philippines."
Unlike previous military agreements with the
U.S., the VFA supposedly limits the nature of military activities to be held in
the country; the number of troops involved, and the duration of the military
activities. The Philippines allegedly has criminal and civil jurisdiction over
visiting United States personnel.
There are no basing and access
arrangements under the VFA since it
pertains merely to "the treatment of United States troops temporarily visiting
the Philippines to conduct bilateral exercises with the Philippines." Also under
the VFA, "the
United States has been made fully
aware that the Philippine Government will not allow the entry in Philippine
territory of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction during
military exercises."
This is in consonance with the
constitutional principle that "the Philippines, consistent with the national
interest, adopts and pursues a policy of freedom from nuclear weapons in its
territory." But the constitutional proscription against the entry of nuclear
weapons into the Philippines is reduced
to an empty phrase unless the VFA guarantees the Philippines the right to
inspect visiting US air and sea craft. It does not.
Despite the claims of its advocates, among whom
are Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and the Department of Foreign Affairs, the VFA also
effectively exempts visiting United States personnel from criminal prosecution.
Just like the defunct Military Bases Agreement, the VFA in fact compels the
Philippines to surrender this sovereign right. The crucial VFA provision on
criminal jurisdiction (Article V Section 3 [d]) thus declares:
Recognizing the responsibility of the United
States military authorities to maintain good order and discipline among its
forces, Philippine authorities will, upon request by the United States, waive
their primary right to exercise jurisdiction except in cases of particular
importance to the Philippines. If the Government of the Philippines determines
that the case is of particular importance, it shall communicate such
determination to the United States authorities within twenty (20) days after the
Philippine authorities receive the United States request.
This provision explicitly declares that the
Philippines "will waive" primary jurisdiction. The appended exception is
meaningless because in "cases of particular importance" to the Philippines, it
can only "request" the U.S. military authorities for recovery of jurisdiction
within 20 days. This being a mere "request," the U.S. is not bound to grant it.
If an American soldier or civilian "visits"
under the provisions of the VFA and commits a crime, he will thus not be subject
to Philippines laws. He cannot be tried by Philippine courts. He can only be
detained in facilities acceptable to the United States.
The VFA has been upheld by the Philippine
Supreme Court as valid and constitutional. Nevertheless, the ambiguities of the
VFA continue to haunt the Philippines and its people. Only last Nov. 1, six U.S.
servicemen who are (or were?) in the Philippines under a VFA activity were
accused of raping a 22-year old Filipina student and local tourist inside the
Subic Freeport Zone.
The crime scene was an American naval base prior
to the Philippine Senate's 1991 rejection of the 1947 Military Bases
Agreement. This would have been an otherwise uncelebrated criminal case of gang
rape – to be sure, deemed by law as a heinous crime in the Philippines. But the
offending parties have yet to be interrogated by Philippine prosecutors, thanks
to, among other factors, the failure of the appropriate officials to take them
into custody, and to even communicate to the US its view that the case is "of
particular importance."
Under Philippine law, the offenders should be
held in a Philippine facility under a no-right-to-bail provision of the
Philippine Constitution. But the six US Marines are not in Philippine custody-allegedly
because, said Secretary of Justice Raul Gonzalez in a TV interview, taking them
into custody would have required the construction of special facilities-implying
that while Philippine detention facilities are good enough for Filipinos, they
are not suitable for US troops!!
And yet the Philippine government proclaims that
the VFA is a fair agreement that does not degrade the country's sovereignty even
if the mere presence of foreign troops is the most blatant expression of that
degradation. The challenge to the Philippine government is to defend and enhance
Philippine interests and the rights of its citizens to be free from the
depredations of foreign troops in their own country. But given the obvious
inability of its officials to do so—and their colonial willingness to
accommodate US wishes at all costs
-
the only alternative is for the people themselves to demand the abrogation of
the agreement as an offense to their sovereign rights and as a threat to every
Filipino. Posted by Bulatlat
CenPEG is a public policy center set up
shortly before the May 2004 elections to help promote people empowerment in
governance and democratic representation of the marginalized poor in an elitist
and patronage-driven electoral and political system. It conducts
research/policy study, education and trainings on governance and people
empowerment. To pursue its programs in research and education-training, CenPEG
taps a wide pool of political analysts, public policy experts and academic
scholars for their expertise and experience in public governance as well as
in grassroots empowerment. © 2005 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.