This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 45, December
18-24, 2005
Human
rights watch
New Killings,
Abductions Blamed on Palparan A
village chief and a councilor was shot dead after meeting with soldiers from the
69th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army. Their companion,
another councilor, is in critical condition. BY DABET
CASTAÑEDA Village chief Victorina Gomez with two
councilors, Romeo Atienza and Rey Macabili were walking a few meters away from
the barangay (village) multipurpose hall at Barangay Parian, Mexico, Pampanga
(71 kms north of Manila), when three unidentified men wearing ski masks on board
a motorcycle fired at them with high powered rifles. Gomez and Atienza were killed instantly.
Macabili is in critical condition, presently confined in a hospital in San
Fernando, Pampanga. The three just came from a dialogue with
soldiers of the 69th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army. They
were asking the soldiers to vacate the multipurpose hall, which the latter has
turned into a military detachment. It was learned that the hall was a project
of the party-list group Bayan Muna (People First) of which Gomez is a member. Roman Polintan, chair of the Central Luzon
chapter of the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan or Bayan (New Patriotic Alliance),
said 19 of the 43 villages in Mexico have military detachments. “We vehemently denounce this brutalities and
point to Palparan as the mastermind,” Polintan said. Major General Jovito Palparan is the head of
the Army’s 7th Infantry Division (ID). The army division operates in
six provinces in Central Luzon, plus Aurora and Pangasinan. Palaparan is being
accused of military atrocities by human rights organizations in Mindoro island
in Southern Tagalog and Eastern Visayas, his two previous assignments.
Two days before the incident, a member of
the Alyansa ng mga Magbubukid sa Bulacan (Alliance of Peasants in Bulacan) or
AMB, was murdered inside his home in Barangay Balaong, San Miguel, Bulacan (75
kms. north of Manila). Alfredo Mañaol Jr, 48, was the eldest son of AMB chair
Alfredo Sr. The regional chapter of the human rights
group Karapatan (Alliance for the Advancement of Peoples’ Rights) has documented
30 victims of killings and seven missing persons since September when Palparan
was assigned to the 7th Infantry Division. Other violations Jess Alcantara of Barangay Pinaod, San
Ildefonso, Bulacan was shot dead at around 1:30 p.m. Dec. 16. Alcantara, a
tricycle driver, was transporting a child in the same village when he was shot.
Witnesses said his assailant, who tailed him, was on a motorcycle. Witnesses also said that two weeks before
the murder, men in civilian clothes went around the village asking about
Alcantara’s whereabouts. Alcantara was former Bayan Muna municipal
coordinator in San Ildefonso and secretary general of the San Ildefonso Tricycle
Operators and Drivers Association Federation. He was survived by his wife and
four children. Meanwhile, in Tarlac (125 kms north of
Manila), Edwin Nuqui, 46, was tortured and abducted allegedly by soldiers last
Monday, Dec. 12. The victim is a member of the party-list group Anakpawis
(toiling masses). He was last seen ferrying passengers on
board his tricycle in Barangay Lubigan, San Jose town. Witnesses said that about 3 p.m., they saw
soldiers mauling Nuqui who was blindfolded. He has been missing since. Polintan said their group also holds
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo equally liable for the acts of violence
against unarmed civilians. “Her silence can only mean that these
killings are a policy of her administration.,” he said.
Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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