This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 6, March 11-17, 2007
ANALYSIS
Metro Militarization: Part of a Bigger Plan? The deployment of
troops in Metro Manila completes the militarization of the whole countryside
which has been intensifying under Arroyo. The whole blueprint smacks of a bigger
plan in the offing. It is even more chilling that local executives have shown no
sign of alarm over this blatant display of military supremacy over civilian
rule.
By Bobby Tuazon The Arroyo government appears to be laying
the ground for an all-out war against militant cause-oriented organizations
along with the progressive party-list groups. This war could even target some
sections of the anti-Arroyo traditional political bloc. This calibrated strategy
will likely begin after the May 14 mid-term elections, or even before it could
take place. That this scenario is building up is shown
by the following indications:
The Arroyo government through its military, police and paramilitary forces
will do every means to make sure that the progressive party-list groups – and
possibly even the GO opposition ticket – will not win decisively in the May
polls. After arresting and detaining Rep. Crispin Beltran early last year,
Arroyo's national security adviser, Norberto Gonzales, Justice Secretary Raul
Gonzalez, the AFP and police are now after Rep. Satur Ocampo, BM president and
first congressional nominee. A warrant of arrest has been served on him on
trumped-up charges of having ordered the execution of leftist activists in
Leyte province some 20 years ago. Together with the urban militarization, this
"legal" offensive is designed to pin the party-list groups on the defensive
and on the run, and keep them away from campaign sorties. This is part of a
reported AFP operation plan that seeks to prevent the progressive party-list
groups from gaining a seat in Congress. The military campaign appears to be
integral to the Operation Bantay Laya I and II;
Contrary to Malacañang claims that the AFP has been ordered not to be involved
in partisan politics, the military is definitely engaged in it – as it had in
the May 2004 presidential elections. Voting trends do not favor the
administration ticket, at least in the senatorial race. Latest surveys show
the GO slate enjoying a secure edge over Arroyo's "Team Unity" despite reports
of massive campaign resources by Malacañang. The same surveys show BM,
Anakpawis and GWP expected to garner the first three slots if the party-list
elections were to be held today;
The Human Security Act of 2007 will serve as the legal teeth for an all-out
attack against the Left it having been designated as "terrorist" as early as
2001. This is the "law" that Norberto Gonzales has been itching to use against
the militant groups, in lieu of his failure to have the mothballed RA 1700 or
the anti-subversion law reinstated. It will be used as a means of
fast-tracking the timeline of the counter-insurgency program to two years.
No respite Despite the reports of the Melo Commission
and UN Special Rapporteur finding a number of generals accountable to the
protracted campaign of extra-judicial killings and enforced disappearances of
nearly 840 activists and party-list organizers since 2001, there are no
indications of a respite to such incidents. Although they have been put on the
defensive by international pressures – including scheduled hearings in the U.S.
Congress on the government's alleged violations of human rights this week – the
reported brains and chief implementers of the killings remain ensconced in their
positions of power. That those named in the reports as playing a role in the
reports of human rights violations have not been arrested or brought to the
so-called "special courts" assigned by the Supreme Court (SC) only shows the
immense power wielded by these alleged perpetrators – and the protection that
they enjoy from their commander-in-chief. It is even possible that they remain
useful as key players in government's brutal repression campaigns. Meantime, there is an apparent detour in the
mode of war against the Left - whom government has accused of being "enemies of
the state" that in the process have put their lives in danger. At the moment,
"legal" offensives and political harassments are in the works coupled with
sustained vilification campaigns portraying the Left's supposed history of
"killing fields." This is being hyped to support the government contention that
the current spate of killings is part of the Left's bloody "internal purge." Apparently, the public is not biting
Gonzales' detractions. Voters generally remain sympathetic to groups tagged by
the military as "terrorist," specifically BM and its bloc of progressive
party-list groups. A number of international human rights mechanisms, including
the UN Human Rights Council, have been put to notice to keep an eye the human
rights crisis in the Philippines. No rethinking This does not mean, however, that there will
be a rethinking of government's policy of political persecution. A premeditated
all-out military strategy is impervious to public sentiment or international
pressures precisely because it is designed, for all intents and purposes, to
stifle dissent, for that matter, to contain the advocacy of genuine reform. This
government has been callous to public pulse and is naïve in thinking that all it
takes to defeat the Left is to wage a brutal military campaign sans a political
war. The suppression of civil and political liberties even if this means
spilling blood is being justified by incantations that it is an act of God, that
there is a need to uphold "the rule of law" and to maintain "political
stability." In the end, under the Arroyo government, the
brutal counter-insurgency campaign and political persecution of the communists'
alleged "legal fronts" will escalate, backed no less by the Human Security Act.
The deployment of troops in Metro Manila completes the militarization of the
whole countryside which has been intensifying under Arroyo. The whole blueprint
smacks of a bigger plan in the offing – a blueprint which, with all probability,
can only come into fruition after the elections, or even before it. It is part
of a bigger scheme to condition the minds of the people of a permanent military
presence in Metro Manila. It is even more chilling that local governments have
shown no sign of alarm over this blatant display of military supremacy over
civilian rule. Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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