This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com).
Vol. VI, No. 27, August
13-19, 2006
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
Streetwise*
Skepticism over GMA Pronouncements
Let
us zero in specifically on the question of violations of civil and political
rights under Mrs. Arroyo's watch. Why is it that we know that this government is
not to be believed when it says it will stop political killings?
BY CAROL
PAGADUAN-ARAULLO
BusinessWorld
Posted by Bulatlat
A week after Mrs. Gloria-Macapagal
Arroyo's State-of-the-Nation (SONA) wherein she condemned political killings,
urged witnesses to come forward and promised to stop extrajudicial executions,
six more people, five of them identified with the Leftist national democratic
movement, and one, a photojournalist and relative of a reporter murdered last
May, lay dead, felled once more by assassins' bullets.
Only the three latest killings merited front page stories. Perhaps it was
because they all happened in just one day and the victims were not so dirt-poor
and faceless -- a 21-year-old League of Filipino Students (LFS) leader in Bicol,
the Bayan Muna Coordinator for Kalinga who was the wife of a prominent physician
and civic leader in Tabuk, and a media practitioner in Metro Manila.
Mrs. Arroyo's response was significant in that for the first time she gave the
Philippine National Police (PNP) and the Justice Department a deadline, 10
weeks, within which to solve some of the killings. The concerned officials
dutifully said they would try to comply with the directive of Mrs. Arroyo.
Nonetheless, why is Mrs. Arroyo's latest pronouncement, like her SONA
three-liner and her creation of the PNP Task Force Usig several months ago, met
with even more skepticism?
Let's set aside the general problem of the Arroyo administration's credibility
generated by its unsatisfactory, to say the least, handling of serious charges
of electoral fraud, corrupt government deals and the tyrannical abuse of
executive powers. Let us not even venture into recalling the many times she has
made promises with such dramatic flourish only to renege on them so blatantly
later on.
Let us zero in specifically on the question of violations of civil and political
rights under Mrs. Arroyo's watch. Why is it that we know that this government is
not to be believed when it says it will stop political
killings?
First, the killings don't stop. The facts speak for themselves.
Second, there is no credible, much less speedy, investigation of the killings,
the involuntary disappearances and the claims of torture while in the hands of
the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) or PNP. The reasons the authorities
provide are questionable and self-serving. If we are to believe the excuses
they routinely dish out, the government's ludicrous inutility in the face of
this patent breakdown of law and order is further exposed.
Government says there are no witnesses. Certainly, few witnesses will dare
testify even at the investigation stage because they inevitably become the next
target of harassment if not fall victim to being killed
themselves. More to the point, government investigators are suspect because of
the common perception that the police, military or their assets are involved as
part of national security policy and the current
counter-insurgency program, Oplan Bantay Laya, not to mention their unenviable
track record as human rights violators.
But are the only means available to government investigators the reliance on
witnesses to the actual killing? What about the physical and circumstantial
evidence? What about information from kin, co-workers and
associates about probable motive and possible suspects? When state forces are
implicated, why do the investigations stop dead in their tracks?
Earlier attempts by victims or relatives to file charges have only resulted in
endless delays at the Justice Department, the inexplicable dismissal or
downgrading of charges and not a single conviction.
Then there is the clear, unequivocal message sent to all concerned when
implicated AFP or PNP officials are promoted and, for the special few, lauded
ever so publicly during the Commander-in-Chief's SONA.
Sometimes there is someone brave or foolish enough to be a witness. Take the
case of the two female UP students and their companion who are alleged to have
been taken by military men in Bulacan more than a month ago. A 14-year-old boy
provided an eyewitness account. A writ of habeas corpus was issued by the Court
of Appeals for military officials in the area of responsibility to produce the
three missing persons but the response of AFP Chief of Staff General Esperon is
to scoff at the court order and deny that they have the three in their custody.
The third basis for our skepticism is the overarching frame of "all-out war"
against the Left that Mrs. Arroyo, her generals and the most virulent
anti-communists in her inner circle have embraced as the ultimate solution to
the decades-old, communist-led revolutionary armed struggle in this country.
Recently the PNP Spokesperson said there is no government policy that says
"specifically or even implicitly, run after them" (i.e. unarmed activists and
progressives referred to as the legal Left). Instead he says that there is an
aggressive policy to break the spine of the Communist Party of the Philippines
and its armed wing, the New People's Army, through intensified military
operations and legal offensives.
What the official doublespeak doesn't say, however, is that legal activists are
considered by the government as communist rebels in sheep's clothing; that is,
they are accused to be merely fronting for the communists, are therefore equally
guilty of rebellion and ergo are fair targets of government's all-out war.
We can come to no other conclusion than this: unarmed political opponents of the
Arroyo regime using their ideas, words and bodies to express their political
beliefs are treated as legitimate military targets, human rights covenants and
international humanitarian law be hanged.
According to the report of the International Fact Finding Mission (IFFM)
organized by Dutch and Belgian lawyers groups in June, "To this date, the Arroyo
administration rejects national and international criticism on its human rights
record, by simply referring to its democratic institutions and human rights
treaties, laws and policies."
"Taking into account that all democratic institutions are formally in place, the
IFFM considers the situation especially alarming. This makes it abundantly clear
that either the constitutional state does not function
properly or that there are powers undermining its proper functioning."
To paraphrase the IFFM report, until and unless the Arroyo regime agrees to
constitute and fully support an independent body, i.e. not controlled by the
government, to investigate the killings, threats and harassment and to follow
its recommendations, all its bombastic statements mean next to nothing.
Posted by Bulatlat
* Published in Business World 5-6 August 2006
© 2006 Bulatlat ■ Alipato Media Center
Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.