This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 16, May 28-June 3, 2006
STREETWISE
Cover-up
At
this point it should be obvious that what the Arroyo government is engaged in is
another massive cover-up, this time, of official sanction for extrajudicial
killings of progressives, activists and their supporters.
By Carol Pagaduan-Araullo
Business World
Posted by Bulatlat
The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) position on the spate of killings of
members and officials of progressive party lists and militant organizations on
the Left of the political spectrum is the most sane official pronouncement we
have heard so far on the matter.
To wit, Chairman Purificacion Quisumbing is saying that at the minimum,
government should be held responsible for not putting a stop to this epidemic of
extrajudicial killings and thereby allowing a climate of impunity to reign.
Since armed agents of the state are prime suspects, the Arroyo government is all
the more duty-bound to act swiftly, conduct a thorough, no-nonsense, credible
investigation that should produce results in terms of arrests and the
successful prosecution of the guilty, both triggermen and masterminds.
What would Malacañang, the chambers of commerce, the socio-civic clubs and even
the Catholic Church hierarchy say, if a health epidemic that kills scores, if
not hundreds of people, over a short period of time, were allowed by the
Department of Health (DoH) to wreak havoc without it lifting a finger? Why, that
would trigger both an official and public outcry.
When the Filipino-Chinese community raises the alarm about kidnappings of its
members, more so if they march in the streets the way they did when a promising,
young woman executive died at the hands of kidnappers several years back, the
authorities scramble to act. Malacañang issues a flurry of strongly-worded
directives for law enforcement agencies to produce results within 48 hours or
face the ire of no less than the President.
The same thing with high profile cases involving media personalities like the
popular actress Nida Blanca. Even if the cases should drag in court, at the very
least cases are built up through persistent police investigative work and the
dogged pursuit of justice by state prosecutors and aggrieved parties themselves.
Curiously, but not unexpectedly, what has been happening with regard to the
alleged political killings is the exact opposite.
First are the official denials that such a spike in the number of cases is true
or indicates anything unusual. As far as Malacañang, the police/military
generals and hard-core anti-communist commentators in the
mass media are concerned there is no pattern to the killings, whether it be the
background and circumstances of the victims, the profile and motives of the
suspected perpetrators or the modus operandi of the killers.
The statements of the victims’ relatives, friends and co-workers that their
chief suspects are “death squads” of the government, either members of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) or
their assets are dismissed as biased and unreliable. There is unison in the
knee-jerk response of the police and the military that the accusing fingers
pointed in their direction are part and parcel of “communist propaganda” and
have no merit whatsoever.
Government officials rue the lack of witnesses who can give leads to solving the
murder cases and thereafter profess helplessness. Physical evidence is not
painstakingly gathered, possible suspects are not tracked down, the crimes are
quickly archived if not abandoned because according to investigators, “there are
no witnesses.”
In fact witnesses in this country do not come forward because they fear for
their lives, having very little trust and confidence in the government’s will,
capacity and track record in protecting them and their families. How much more
when suspicion is high that the assailants and their bosses are in the very
government agencies charged with investigating such crimes.
A case in point are the witnesses in the abduction and murder of the human
rights leader of Karapatan (Alliance for the Advancement of People’s Rights) in
Southern Tagalog, Eden Marcellana, together with peasant leader, Ka Eddie
Gumanoy in 2003. In fact they themselves were abducted when their fact-finding
mission to Mindoro Oriental was waylaid by armed men on a national highway.
They survived the ordeal and courageously stood as witnesses, even identifying
the right-hand man of then Col. Jovito Palparan, a master sergeant, as one of
the kidnappers but nothing happened. The case is still languishing in the (In)Justice
Department. Worse, the witnesses suffer all sorts of harassment and must rely
on their own meager resources to protect themselves.
Now that the Arroyo government is no longer able to deny that the rash of
political killings are a gruesome fact, they have resorted to a more sinister
line that both civilian and military authorities are saying in chorus.
Mrs. Arroyo’s top security people are saying that the killings are being done by
the communists themselves since they have a history of bloody purges. They
dredge up the anti-infiltration campaign of the Communist Party of the
Philippines (CPP) in the early 1980s that went terribly awry and victimized many
innocent members and supporters of the communist movement and they say this is
what is happening again.
What they don’t say is that the CPP has publicly acknowledged, condemned and
vowed to make amends to the victims for the excesses and abuses that their
attempts to flush out military infiltrators from their ranks had caused.
(Something that the military and police high command have never done vis a vis
their own terrible human rights records.)
The government continues to shroud in mystery the pronouncements of the CPP
relating to this issue including their acknowledgement that such
anti-infiltration campaigns had caused more harm to their cause than even the
most fearsome government military campaigns. It stands to reason that the
CPP-NPA would be extremely careful not to allow a repeat of such a grievous
mistake.
Nevertheless, Mrs. Arroyo’s men - Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, National
Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales, Justice Secretary Raul Gonzalez, PNP chief
Arturo Lomibao and the AFP top brass want us to believe that the most plausible
reason for the more than 250 alleged political killings that are continuing to
this day is that the members of the CPP-NPA are simply killing each other for
reasons that are still to be determined.
At this point it should be obvious that what the Arroyo government is engaged in
is another massive cover-up, this time, of official sanction for extrajudicial
killings of progressives, activists and their supporters. Business World /
Posted by Bulatlat
© 2006 Bulatlat ■ Alipato Publications
Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.