This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com).
Vol. VI, No. 41,
Nov. 19-25, 2006
STREETWISE*
The Return of Fascist Rule
The Anti-Terrorism Bill promises to be the legal firmament for the return of fascist dictatorship while maintaining the grand pretense of “democratic” rule. Without a doubt, it also will create a firestorm of protest and resistance that will signal the end of another oppressive and reviled ruler the same way the unlamented dictator Marcos was toppled by an aroused Filipino people.
BY
CAROL PAGADUAN-ARAULLO
Business World
Posted by Bulatlat
Anyone who has yearned for and enjoyed the inner peace and tranquility brought
about by a period of complete silence and focused meditation knows the shock of
sudden and unexpected intrusion of any form, more so the jarring violence of
physical aggression imposed with arrogance and abuse of authority. Therefore the
forcible entry and intrusive search into the convent of the Contemplatives of
the Good Shepherd (CGS) in the late evening of All Saints’ Day is a clear
travesty.
Not only did the police raiding team headed by a certain Col. Wilfredo Reyes
violate the law by failing to present a valid search warrant, they completely
disregarded the internationally recognized principle of sanctuary accorded to
churches, mosques and similar religious venues. (The same raiding team
subsequently attempted to enter the convent of the Missionary Sisters of Mary
and also conducted a search at the San Lorenzo Ruiz Pastoral Center, all located
within the vicinity of Baan, Butuan City.)
The lame excuse that the police did not know what “contemplative” means and that
it was a case of “mistaken identity” appears to be a clumsy attempt to escape
blame for official wrongdoing; if true, it also exposes police incompetence of
the highest order.
Why, in the wake of this latest outrage, is there complete silence, amounting to
tacit approval, from the Arroyo government, starting with the immediate
superiors of the police unit that conducted the raid, all the way up to the
police top brass, the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) and
Malacañang itself?
Such a response from the authorities is no longer surprising. Until the hue and
cry from the local and international human rights community, the Arroyo regime
had resorted to looking the other way and pretending that no violations of human
rights were taking place. It repeatedly said that the political killings were
merely the result of the overactive imagination of human rights organizations
such as Karapatan, whose motives are, in the first place, suspect, since these
are considered by the Arroyo government to be “front organizations” of the
Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA).
When the official denials and washing of hands became patently unacceptable,
Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, created a police task force and then a so-called
“independent” commission to investigate the rash of political killings. If only
to give these bodies an iota of credibility, one would have expected that they
make some sort of statement condemning the CGS raid as well as the most recent
murder of the chairperson of the Eastern Samar chapter of Karapatan, who was
gunned down using the old modus operandi of death squads cited by Amnesty
International. Except for the condemnation by Butuan Bishop Juan de Pueblos,
himself incidentally a member of the Melo Commission, we have not heard a squeak
from the much-vaunted but inutile investigative body.
The uniformly complete silence of superiors all the way up to Malacañang
confirms that all these illegal actions by state authorities are not isolated
incidents but are done in accordance with state policy. More ominously, these
recent incidents show the Arroyo regime is bent on intensifying its violent and
indiscriminate persecution not only of its political opponents but also those
who advocate human rights, justice and peace.
Clearly, Malacañang no less should be held accountable not only because it
continues to fail to put a stop to these gross and wanton human rights
violations, but because it has initiated all these in the first place through
its militarist policy of “total war against the Left” and because it continues
to encourage and reward the perpetrators in spite of widespread condemnation and
its own posturing and protestations of innocence.
To the victims of the state’s human rights violations and their supporters, the
Arroyo regime is not just an accomplice or compliant collaborator, it is the
mastermind of all these crimes.
These recent events leave no doubt as to the real danger, if not the intent,
behind the Anti-Terrorism Bill (ATB) that Mrs. Arroyo wants approved by the
Senate before the ASEAN(Association of Southeast Asian Nations) ministerial
meeting that the Philippines is hosting in December. Not content with getting
away with murder and other grievous offenses, Malacañang wants the state
apparatus to have an even greater leeway to invade privacy, arrest and detain
indefinitely on the basis of the flimsiest (and in practice, fabricated)
accusations, proscribe legitimate protest actions such as industrial strikes and
political rallies and illegalize legitimate organizations critical of
government, and a whole slew of fascist measures that would allow it to rule
with an iron hand without having to declare martial law.
In fact the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), “a leading international
non-governmental organization consisting of jurists who represent all the
regions and legal systems in the world, working to uphold the rule of law and
the legal protection of human rights,” has urged the Philippine Senate not to
adopt the ATB without “significant amendments to ensure compliance with
international humanitarian law.”
The ICJ specifically cited “the proposed reintroduction of the death penalty as
punishment for the crime of terrorism, excessive periods of detention without
judicial authorization, and a number of other far-reaching law enforcement
powers accorded to the military.” The ICJ noted that history gives ample
evidence that “using the military in policing increases the risks of human
rights abuses as they are not trained as investigators, law enforcers, prison
officials or experts examining bank records.”
The ICJ was further concerned about the powers and accountability of a new
Anti-Terrorism Council to be created by the ATB. To wit, “The Council will have
far-reaching and at times open-ended powers, including the establishment of
extensive data-bases, a special counter-terrorism force and other powers without
specifying their scope, modalities and democratic control.”
The Anti-Terrorism Bill promises to be the legal firmament for the return of
fascist dictatorship while maintaining the grand pretense of “democratic” rule.
Without a doubt, it also will create a firestorm of protest and resistance that
will signal the end of another oppressive and reviled ruler the same way the
unlamented dictator Marcos was toppled by an aroused Filipino people.
Business World / Posted by Bulatlat
*Published in Business World
10-11 November 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.