This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 44, December
11-17, 2005
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
From Jan to Nov 2005 With
almost 100,000 victims of human rights violations, the Macapagal-Arroyo
administration proves to have no mercy on political forces calling for the
ouster of an illegitimate presidency. With nowhere to go for redress, the
victims were constrained to go to two people’s courts this year in their search
for justice. BY DABET
CASTAÑEDA Tension in Aeta area There was tension among the Aeta (an
indigenous tribe) residents of Barangay Camias in Porac, Pampanga, after two
10-wheeler trucks arrived in the early morning of Dec. 8. The long shout of the
tribe’s leader was the signal for the members of the community to go out of
their houses and to gather in front of a Baptist church where the two trucks
were parked. More than 100 Aeta families assembled. They
were relieved to know that those who alighted from the trucks were members of
the mercy mission organized by the Alay Bayan, Inc. (ABI), a foundation
assisting natural and man-made disaster-stricken areas. Sr. Cecil Ruiz, ABI executive director, said
her organization received reports that for almost four months since September,
Army and Air Force soldiers conducted zoning operations in the area supposedly
to rescue Maj. Neptune Eliquin of the Philippine Air Force (PAF) who was
reportedly captured by the New People’s Army (NPA) in late August this year.
“Napabayaan na namin yung mga tanim namin
dahil hindi na kami makapunta sa bukid,” (We were unable to take care of our
crops because we cannot go to our farms) one the residents said during a random
interview by Bulatlat. “Yung konti naming naani hindi na namin
naibenta sa mga mamimili sa palengke,” (We were unable to market the few
crops we were able to harvest) one of the residents said. For two days since the soldiers arrived,
they could not eat due to fear. They were also forbidden by the soldiers from
speaking in Kapampangan, the local dialect, and ordered to speak in only in
Tagalog so the soldiers could understand. A mother, who carried her one-year old child
using a cheesecloth tied around her waist and neck, said they did not go out of
their house out of intense fear. She added that her children stopped going to
school for a several days because even the teachers were afraid to come out. The community had reason to be afraid.
In midnight of Sept. 16, Bienvenido Capuno,
their village chair, was shot dead by three unidentified men believed by the
villagers to be soldiers. A witness who refused to be identified said Capuno and
four other village officials were manhandled and dragged around the community
when around a hundred soldiers came in early September to search for Eliquin. “Sabi ng mga sundalo tinatago daw namin
yung mga NPA,” (According to the soldiers, we were hiding the NPA rebels)
the witness said. A week before the killing happened, he heard a soldier whom he
identified only as “Tisoy” telling Capuno, “Mukhang may underground ka
sa utak mo. Balang araw utak mo ang pasasabugin ko.” (It appears that you
have “underground” in your brain. Someday, I will shoot your brains out.)
Underground, he said, referred to the underground revolutionary movement. The witness said Capuno was shot twice in
the head while he was sleeping in the small videoke bar he owned and operated in
Barangay Pio, a neighboring village. Villagers admired Capuno who opposed the
community’s demolition due to mining and eco-tourism. Overall human rights picture The fear and anxiety felt in this Aeta
community are echoed in hundreds of communities in the Philippine countryside
that have been under siege mainly due to military operations. The human rights group Karapatan (Alliance
for the Advancement of People’s Rights) said that from January to Nov. 30, there
were 872 cases of human rights violations recorded, with 99,003 victims in 288
communities. The most frequent types of human rights
violations were forcible evacuation/displacement, strafing and indiscriminate
firing, and threat, harassment and intimidation. (See Table 1) Table 1 Case Affected Forcible evacuation/displacement 48,765 Strafing, indiscriminate firing and bombings 23,911 Threat, harassment and intimidation 10,832 Hamletting 10,031 Restriction or dispersal of mass actions, public
assemblies, gatherings 9,012 Source: Karapatan Based on these figures, there were 12 people
whose rights were violated every hour, or 296 people every day, in the first
eleven months of 2005. According to Karapatan, 150 people were
killed in the first eleven months of the year. They were victims of summary
execution, assassination, massacre, strafing, indiscriminate firing and
bombings. In 2004, Karapatan documented 63 political killings. In its 2005 Human Rights Report, Karapatan
said that it monitored heavy military presence in areas perceived by the Armed
Forces of the Philippines (AFP) as strongholds of armed revolutionary groups
like the NPA, Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and Moro National Liberation
Front (MNLF). In the latter part of November, at least
2,000 families have been reportedly affected by military operations in seven
municipalities in Quezon province (more than 100 kilometers south of Manila) due
to the military’s pursuit operations against the NPA. In southern Philippines, Moro communities in
Sulu was turned into a garrison when the AFP conducted massive military
operations against the MNLF in February and November, Karapatan’s Sulu Mercy
Mission Report said. Mining, logging and military operations The concentration of military operations are
focused in areas where there are strong resistance to government-business joint
ventures or businesses of multinational companies especially in mining and
logging, the Karapatan report added. “It was no coincidence,” the report said,
“that a few months after intensive military operations in Samar, The Department
of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) lifted the logging ban in the area.” The residents of Samar, one of the three
main islands in Eastern Visayas (Central Philippines), became victims of
offensive military operations from February to August 2005 under command of
controversial Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan. During this period, 25 persons were
killed and 31 others were abducted and still missing. In Tarlac (120 km. North of Manila), 13
individuals were killed given their involvement in the 13-month strike at
Hacienda Luisita that started in Nov. 2004. The workers and residents of the
6,400-hectare sugar estate owned by the family of former President Corazon
Cojuangco-Aquino have been demanding better working conditions and opposing land
conversion schemes and Macapagal-Arroyo’s pet project, the Subic-Clark-Tarlac
Expressway Project (SCTEP). Assassinations, disappearances, massacres Like Capuno, several local officials known
to be supportive of the people’s struggles have been targeted for assassination
and similar harassment. Tarlac lost City Councilor Abelardo Ladera
and Barangay (village) Captain Ricardo Ramos who were both killed by snipers
believed to be members of the military’s death squad. A fact-finding mission in Villareal, Samar
in the middle of this year found a supposed military hit list that included
municipal officials from the mayor down to the lowest village official. In fact,
50-year-old Constancio Calubid, a member of the Barangay San Andres Peacekeeping
Council, was tortured by soldiers in front of his family and then abducted. He
was found dead a month later. Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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First
of two parts
Bulatlat
Most frequent types of human rights violation
(Jan. to Nov. 2005)
Individuals