Macapagal-Arroyo and Command Responsibility

A consensus is shaping up among lawyers’ circles, human rights groups, civil libertarians and others that the case against President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, along with rogue generals implicated in the war crimes and crimes against humanity, should proceed under the principle of command responsibility even if this means calling for her arrest and indictment in an international tribunal held outside the country.

BY THE POLICY STUDY, PUBLICATION AND ADVOCACY PROGRAM (PSPA)
CENTER FOR PEOPLE EMPOWERMENT IN GOVERNANCE (CENPEG)
Posted by Bulatlat
Analysis
Vol. VII, No. 22, July 8-14, 2007

President Gloria M. Arroyo may heave a sigh of relief when Congress convenes for its 14th session this July without a third impeachment waiting to be filed against her. But there are increasing doubts as to whether she can evade responsibility for the extra-judicial killings and other human rights violations that her own security forces have reportedly committed under her watch since 2001.
Directly or indirectly, the Office of the President has been linked repeatedly to the executions, frustrated killings and abduction of activists which, it is widely believed, could not have been committed systematically and on a nationwide-scale without Mrs. Arroyo, as commander-in-chief of the armed forces, knowing or encouraging it.

The atrocities were attributed to government’s national security doctrine cited in Oplan Bantay Laya I and II, which sought to “neutralize” suspected front organizations of the communist underground. The counter-insurgency strategy, which the President wanted to fast-track in two years, aimed at breaking the backbone of the armed revolutionary movement but its punitive operations launched in so-called “priority areas” led instead to the assassination and abduction of community leaders, party-list organizers, human rights activists, leaders of church and faith communities, as well as a big number of workers, peasants, indigenous people, Muslims, women and children. By the latest count, the human rights alliance Karapatan reports that there have been 866 victims of extra-judicial or summary executions and at least 180 victims of forced disappearance. This is on top of tens of thousands of civilians hurt and displaced by militarization in the rural provinces.

Since the beginning of this year, the Macapagal-Arroyo administration has been on the defensive in the wake of mounting pressures from within the country and international and multilateral organizations for the state security forces to be reined in to put a stop to the killings. Arroyo has been served notice by a number of foreign governments and institutions that the release of development aid would be contingent on its human rights record.

Investigation

At home, Arroyo officials face possible investigation by the Senate for their role in the extra-judicial killings and disappearances with at least one of three active AFP generals, who have implicated military top brass to the killings, promising to reveal everything once the probe opens. Pledging to have the Supreme Court (SC) take a proactive role on the deteriorating state of human rights, Chief Justice Reynato Puno has convened a summit on July 16-17 to take up the issue of “command responsibility” in connection with the political killings. The chief justice earlier designated 99 regional trial courts as special tribunals for the speedy and expeditious resolution of human rights cases. “The extrajudicial taking of life is the ultimate violation of human rights,” Puno said in announcing the tribunals last February. “Extrajudicial killings also constitute brazen assaults on the rule of law.”

The investigations expected to be held in the Senate, the Puno-initiated human rights summit, and similar activities can serve as venues for tackling the issue of “command responsibility” in the killings that could go all the way to the office of the President. Anticipating the backlash against Arroyo, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita last week said that command responsibility only applies to military personnel and does not include the President as commander-in-chief. The definition of command responsibility by Ermita, a former Marcos colonel, smacks of how little the presidential office knows about the doctrine. Or it can be seen as a move to shield the President from her possible accountability for the killings.

The doctrine of command responsibility used to apply only to military personnel and their superiors who can be subjected to criminal or civil liability for war crimes and crimes against humanity they committed. Over the years, however, the doctrine – adopted in various tribunals and codified in international laws – has evolved to cover also civilian authorities.

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