HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
Kalinga Tribal Leader and
Activist Laid to Rest
Rafael Markus Bangit –
Makoy to everyone including his tribemates and village mates –has finally
been laid to rest in his village in serene Tomiangan,
Upper Tabuk
in Kalinga province. Despite military and police avowals that there is no
“hit list” of activists, several other activists in the Cordillera region
are sensing danger in their midst.
BY ACE ALEGRE
Bulatlat
Forty-seven-year old Rafael
Markus Bangit – Makoy to everyone including his tribemates and village
mates – has finally been laid to rest in his village in serene Tomiangan,
upper Tabuk in Kalinga province.
Born on Oct. 24, 1959 to the Malbong tribe of Tabuk, Makoy led an unusual,
perhaps beyond the ordinary life. For more than three decades, Markus
devoted his time, energy and skills to the Cordillera movement for
self-determination, said the Cordillera Peoples Alliance (CPA), perhaps
the largest aggrupation of tribal and indigenous peoples’ organizations in
the highland region.
The CPA takes its roots from the Kalinga Bontoc Peace Pact Holders
Association led by revered tribal leader and hero Macli-ing Dulag in the
1970s. It had been the fiercest tribal and IP group in the Cordillera
region fighting large dams and commercial mining, which destroy the
environment and tribal communities.
Starting as a very young activist in the mid-1970s, when his village was
under threat of being submerged in one of the four megadams of the Chico
River Basin Hydroelectric Project of the Marcos dictatorship, Makoy joined
militants opposing the dam project.
He actively participated in activities that would defend the territories
of indigenous peoples including his tribe’s land whenever he was home in
Tomiangan. He was an avid leader of Kalinga college students in Baguio.
From 1995 to 1998, Makoy served as chairperson of CPA-Kalinga. He became
secretary-general of Bayan Muna (people first) Kalinga chapter in 2001
and was its vice chairperson at the time he was killed.
Pangat, local government leader, activist, “big brother”
Makoy, despite his young age was a respected leader in his community.
From 1994 to 2000, he became active in local government, first as the
secretary and then as councilman of Brgy. Dupag, which has administrative
jurisdiction over Tomiangan.
Just around 40 then,
he was nevertheless very much respected by the elders of his tribe. This
respect grew as Makoy showed unmatched skill in settling inter-tribal
disputes while enriching his knowledge of the bodong (peace pact)
system. Makoy was a pangat (peace pact holder) himself.
Makoy was traveling to Baguio with his son Banna on the fatal night of
June 8 when gunned down by armed men in Echague town, Isabela. He was the
coordinator of the Elders Desk of the CPA and also of the CPA affiliate
Bodong Pongors Association (BPO), a federation of Cordillera tribal
elders.
Kankanaey tribe member Wyndle Bolinget, CPA secretary-general, says Makoy
was one of the senior members of the CPA regional secretariat in Baguio
and had been a “big brother” to him and the younger CPA secretariat
members.
Since August 2004, Makoy had been traveling to Baguio to the CPA regional
offices from his family in Tabuk.
Send-off for Makoy
There was a huge march-demonstration from Tabuk town proper to his village
in Tomiangan before he was buried June 14.
He was sent off by
his family – his wife Ausutina and their four children (the eldest is 15
years old while the youngest is 5 years old), as well as other people
whose life were touched by him and his tribe.
Bolinget said that
with the death of Makoy, the Cordillera movement for self-determination
has lost one of its most highly-committed and valuable leaders. “It is a
political crime and a crime against humanity,” the young Kankanaey
tribesman said.
”While most of us remain under heavy surveillance and in imminent danger
of assassination by what he claimed as government-sponsored but still
unacknowledged death squads, it (the killing of Bangit) is another
barbaric act that perpetuates government in power through the might of the
gunbarrel,” Bolinget added.
Cordillera activists watched
Meanwhile, despite avowals of the military and police that there is no
“hit list” among activists in the country, several other activists here
are sensing danger in their midst.
While Makoy reportedly told his colleagues of someone tailing him in Tabuk
before he traveled to Baguio on June 8, a leader of the Kilusang
Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP or Philippine Peasant Movement) local chapter
in the mining town of Itogon, Benguet is also fearing for his life.
This after Jose Doton, chairperson of the local anti-dam alliance TIMMAWA
(Tignay dagiti Mannalon a Mangwayawaya iti Agno or Peasant Movement to
Free the Agno) was killed on May 16, two kilometers from his home in San
Nicolas town, Pangasinan.
Virgilio Aniceto of Itogon, Benguet is Doton’s vice chairperson. He is
also a pastor of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP).
In recent weeks, Aniceto has been reportedly tailed by three men, one
boarding the jeepney with him everytime he heads home, and two following
the jeepney on a motorcycle.
In Aniceto’s home barrio, Ucab, at least two other men have been asking
residents about the pastor’s movements, as if trying to establish his
routine. But there is no real pattern to Aniceto’s movements, and his
neighbors have, anyway, refused to answer all questions.
On May 10, two of the three men said to be tailing him reportedly accosted
and tried to forcibly restrain a seven-year old girl in Ucab Proper to ask
her about Aniceto and her father.But the child reportedly bit the hand
that was tightly gripping her forearm, broke free, and ran to report the
incident to her elders.
She said the men had shown her a picture of her father and “Uncle Vergel”
(Aniceto) and that the word “WANTED” had been written under the picture,
in marker ink. It was reportedly the third time the men had accosted and
unsuccessfully tried to question her on Aniceto and her father.
The little girl is the daughter of Eduard Fernando Mangili,
Secretary-General of APIT TAKO (Alyansa dagiti Pesante iti Taéng
Kordilyera or Alliance of Peasants in the Cordillera Homeland), a regional
chapter of the KMP. He is also the first vice chairperson of the CPA.
Mangili’s name, along with that of the farmers’ group chair Julian Gayomba,
allegedly appeared on a death squad hit list that the CPA got hold of in
February and exposed to the public, said Bolinget.
Since then, “suspicious-looking characters” have reportedly been seen
prowling around Ucab Proper, a tightly-knit mining neighborhood where
almost all the residents are akin either by consanguinity or affinity, and
thus a place where strangers and strange doings easily stand out.
Also several months ago, the CPA offices had been put under 24-hour
surveillance, Bolinget said. This, though the matter has been investigated
by the Baguio police upon the directive of Philippine National Police
chief Dir. Gen. Arturo Lomibao, who was prompted by international pressure
from international groups to issue the order.
Lulu A. Gimenez,
secretariat coordinator for information and education of the KMP-affiliate
APIT TAKO disclosed that Julian Gayomba, 64-year-old chairperson of the
said farmers group, has been living away from his wife and children for
the past four months. He has taken refuge in the village of his ancestors.
A vegetable farmer in Guinaoang, Mankayan, Benguet, his wife’s home
village, Julian is now trying to earn a living as a small-scale gold miner
in Alab, Bontoc town in Mountain Province, the village of his parents’
origin.
But at a sari-sari store on the Bontoc road, across the bridge from Alab,
“sinister-looking men” have reportedly been showing up and asking
customers and passersby if they know whether Lakay Julian is in the
village. The men come in a van and a motorbike that bear no license
plates, Gimenez said.
They stay to stare at
the bridge and the village for hours at a time. They are armed and wear
Kevlar vests, said Gimenez. “They have not attempted to enter Alab Proper,
where Julian has been living,” she said. “Perhaps they are wary of what
the people of Alab can do to them.”
Alab is among the Chico River valley communities that gained a reputation
for tribal militancy during the time of the Marcos dictatorship. It
actively participated in the anti Chico Dam battles.
Gayomba left Guinaoang for Alab on Feb. 12, this year upon receiving word
that he was among those named in a supposed hit list which the CPA had
gotten hold of, and that sinister-looking men had been asking about him at
the places he frequented, such as the market in Abatan, Buguias and the
Vegetable Trading Post in La Trinidad, both in Benguet.
Throughout the week of Julian’s departure, strangers kept turning up in
Guinaoang, searching for him, Gimenez said. Strangers raked through the
area on motorbikes, she added.
In March, strangers reportedly combed Guinaoang on foot, asking barrio
folk if they had seen Julian and showing them a photo of him. “This man
in the picture is a member of the New People’s Army (NPA),” they would say
to some of the people; to others, “This man feeds the NPA.”
Then in April, the always kevlar-vested armed men made their first
appearance in front of the bridge to Alab. In May, they started their
bridge-and-village watch. They are still at it.
Gayomba like Makoy,
Aniceto and Mangili had been active leaders of various non-traditional
organizations in their communities and at the regional level. Gayomba
heads the MACQUITACDEG, the alliance of communities who have opposed the
continued operation of Lepanto Consolidated Mining Company, that they
claim had been raving the precious lands and resources. Bulatlat
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