RED-TAGGING ACTIVISTS:
A CONTINUING TARGET OF BLOODLUST UNDER DUTERTE
VICIOUS
CAMPAIGN
Philippine
Daily Inquirer / 04:07 AM August 18, 2020
No less
than the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) has expressed “grave concern’’ over
the startling “Wanted’’ posters that appeared late last week in several places
in Davao City which branded nine “lumad”
rights advocates and leaders of militant organizations as “human rights
violators’’ and “berdugo’’ or executioners.
The CHR
warned that such “irresponsible act’’ sends a “chilling effect’’ on freedom of
expression and poses a threat to the safety of the individuals named.
For Dr.
Jean Lindo, one of those tagged in the posters, this was a clear “vilification campaign’’ meant to condition the public that
killing them would be justified. “We do take this seriously as a threat.
This is designed to silence us and stop us from defending human rights,” said
Lindo, chair of the women’s group Gabriela in Southern Mindanao.
The
posters carried the names and photos of Lindo; Maritess Kafiola, identified in
the poster as KMP (Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas); Jong Monzon of the lumad
group Pasaka; Hamuel Tequis, a bishop of the United Church of Christ
Philippines (UCCP) Haran labeled in the poster as “CPP party member”; Jay
Apiag, secretary-general of Karapatan in Southern Mindanao; Tony Salubre, KMP
spokesperson for Southern Mindanao; Kharlo Manang of Salinlahi; Carlo Olalo,
Bayan Southern Mindanao Region; and Meggie Nolasco, the executive director of
Salugpungan Ta’ Tanu Igkanugon Community Learning Center.
“These are
activists who have genuine work,’’ Lindo said of the group. But in an absurd
twist, they are now accused of being human rights violators and oppressors of
indigenous people, the very marginalized sector they have been supporting and
championing. Worse, they’re also tagged as “Wanted,” as if they are fugitives
from the law.
Davao City
police chief Col. Kirby Kraft has vowed to look into the incident, but then let
slip where that investigation would be heading.
“We would
like to know who are the people who stand to gain from these posters because,
on the part of the government, there’s no need to post these posters in the
first place. Are they posting it so that if something happens to them, they
will blame the government?” Kraft asked, referring to the lumad advocates.
That
notion, oddly defensive from the outset, essentially gaslights the issue, by
putting the onus on the accused individuals to disprove the dangerous labels
flung at them. Kraft would have the public believe that these advocates,
already working in a fraught environment of pervasive impunity where militants
and critical voices are intimidated, harassed, and killed, would knowingly
invite harm on themselves and put themselves in the crosshairs of state forces
to somehow embarrass the government.
The Davao
City posters are the newest incarnation
of the phenomenon of red-tagging, which
has become the government’s default category for those who do not dance to its
tune. The recent enactment of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020 gives the
government even more power and discretion to identify and prosecute people it
suspects to be terrorists, and the Davao posters clearly aim to tap into that
expanded punitive order by freely vilifying activists and critics as enemies of
the state.
Salugpungan,
for one, has long been the subject of a vilification campaign, according to its
executive director Meggie Nolasco, daughter of retired Inquirer executive
editor Jose Ma. Nolasco.
In
November 2018, Nolasco was among more than 70 other militant leaders and
volunteers arrested in Talaingod, Davao del Norte, while responding to a
distress call from lumad school teachers who were being harassed by the
military. They were later charged with trafficking, kidnapping, and abuse of
children in a lumad school.
It took
one brave judge, Tagum RTC Executive Judge Arlene Palabrica, to stand up for
the rights of the group. With no information filed against them, the judge
ordered their release amid protests from the police.
Salugpungan
said the attacks against them have been relentless since President Duterte
publicly threatened to bomb lumad schools in 2017. “The forcible closure of
other schools was sped up during the nationwide lockdown, which brings the
number of different lumad schools closed to 178, disenfranchising more than
5,500 students all over Mindanao,” it said.
A June 4,
2020 report of the United Nations Human Rights Office noted “widespread human
rights violations and persistent impunity’’ in the Philippines, prompted by
harmful rhetoric coming from high-level officials and the state-led demonization of dissent through red-tagging and
heavy-handed laws and policies. International scrutiny, however, seems to be
having little effect for now in deterring this vicious campaign, strongly
indicating the sense of official protection it enjoys; the Davao “Wanted”
posters just upped the slander by equating
human-rights advocates with common criminals and fugitives.
SLAIN
ACTIVIST WAS MONITORING NEGROS ABUSES, KILLINGS
By: Carla
P. Gomez, Nestor P. Burgos Jr. - @inquirerdotnet
Philippine
Daily Inquirer / 04:47 AM August 19, 2020
BACOLOD
CITY, Negros Occidental, Philippines — For the past three years, Zara Alvarez had been monitoring and
documenting the killings and arrest of farmers, lawyers and activists on Negros
Island. She organized missions to look into cases of suspected human rights
violations, coordinated with lawyers and helped families of the victims.
Around 7
p.m. on Monday, Alvarez became a victim herself.
A man
wearing a face mask and a cap shot her repeatedly as she was walking with two
others to her boarding house at Eroreco Subdivision in Barangay Mandalagan
here.
Alvarez,
39, a single mother to an 11-year-old girl, died outright.
“Witnesses
heard six gunshots. She was shot first on the back,” Capt. Richard Pajarito,
chief of Station 3 of the city police, told the Inquirer on Tuesday.
The
assailant fled on a motorcycle driven by an accomplice, Pajarito said.
Alvarez, a
former political detainee, served as a paralegal for the human rights group
Karapatan and as research and advocacy officer of the nongovernmental
organization Negros Island Health Integrated Program.
Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos, Negros
Occidental,
was grief-stricken.
“I bleed
due to this neverending injustice and violence. I just cannot believe this
continuing madness of senseless killings. These
systemic killings of human rights defenders and activists must be condemned and
must stop,” Alminaza said in a statement on Tuesday.
He
described Alvarez as a champion against injustice, always ready to organize
farmers, peasants, workers, jeepney drivers and even church people for the
cause.
“Zara,
they took your life, believing that they can silence the cause you are fighting
for,” Alminaza said. “But no, Zara, your martyrdom in the cause for justice
will inspire us to advance the cry for justice—the cry of the oppressed.”
Alvarez
was the 89th victim of killings of human
rights defenders, lawyers and other activists since January 2017 on Negros
Island based on a list she had helped compile and update.
Karapatan
said she was the 13th human rights worker of the group killed since President
Duterte took office in 2016.
Read more:
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1323844/watchdog-of-negros-killings-abuses-slain#ixzz6qPLvO0o
Red-tagging triggers a systematic process designed to bypass the judicial system in order to accomplish extrajudicial killings with impunity, whether by the police or through paid assassins, who act as judge, jury, and executioner when they commit, simply and plainly, murder.
Public domain image
ReplyDeleteImage link:
https://pixabay.com/illustrations/hand-blood-smeared-wounding-525988/
Gonzalinho
MORE THAN A POLICE STORY
ReplyDeletePhilippine Daily Inquirer / 04:30 AM August 15, 2020
Assassination ‘akyat-bahay’ style” is how this paper’s columnist Ceres Doyo describes the killing of Randall Echanis, Anakpawis chair, deputy secretary-general of peasant group Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, and a peace negotiator of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) in talks with the government.
…Erlinda Echanis put the entire drama in the most succinct possible context: Why, she asked, “is my husband’s cadaver under investigation in the first place? It should be the perpetrators that should be hunted down and persecuted, not the lifeless body of my husband.”
Point well made. There may indeed be a reason for the tussle between Echanis’ family and friends and the authorities for “custody” of his body. Reports say Echanis’ body bore marks of torture and even bullets to the head, aside from numerous stab wounds. Is the belated realization that the victim’s body was a potent “witness” against those who killed him the reason for the unseemly tug-of-war?
…Interestingly, no police report on the killings has been released, which is all of a piece with the contention of many others that the attack on Echanis is just part of a “culture of extrajudicial killings with impunity.”
Read more: https://opinion.inquirer.net/132728/more-than-a-police-story#ixzz6qPNDpomd
“A culture of extrajudicial killings with impunity”
Gonzalinho
PUBLIC OFFICIALS SHOULD BE OPEN TO CRITICISM
ReplyDeletePhilippine Daily Inquirer / 04:03 AM August 19, 2020
The editorial “Ignoring the experts” (8/13/20) brought to the fore once more the dismissive and reflexively antagonistic attitude of some of our public servants to criticism.
Interior Secretary Eduardo Año, vice chair of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases, was reportedly irked by the concerns raised by engineers and motorcycle experts on the aerodynamics and safety of the government’s motorcycle barrier policy, protesting it as “hazardous” and an “unnecessary cost burden.” He rejected the criticisms and even scolded the protesters. Such cavalier attitude is truly appalling.
To quickly dismiss criticisms is the refuge of those who fail in their job due to brazen incompetence. Open-mindedness to criticisms, no matter how harsh or tactless they may seem, goes a long way. It opens opportunities to find the truth and to rethink and reassess one’s position in a given situation. The essence of the democratic exchange of ideas in formulating or shaping policies is expressed in the words of Russia’s empress, Catherine the Great: “I examine the circumstances, I take advice, I consult the enlightened part of the people, and in this way I find out what sort of effect my laws will have.”
This quote from James Boswell’s “The Life of Samuel Johnson” is also instructive: “You may abuse a tragedy, though you cannot write one. You may scold a carpenter who has made you a bad table, though you cannot make a table. It is not your trade to make tables.” Simply, it teaches that, even though he is not in the trade of making tables, the customer has the wherewithal and the right to criticize the carpenter and complain about the poor quality of his work.
Ordinary citizens, too, have the right and, in fact, the civic duty to voice out their dissent and offer alternative views over bad decisions or actions by public officials. In the end, listening to well-meaning criticism, not affected praise, will lead to a well-studied and thought-out plan that the people can stand behind and support.
DIOSDADO V. CALONGE
dvccalo@yahoo.com
Read more: https://opinion.inquirer.net/132818/public-officials-should-be-open-to-criticism#ixzz6qPYH2P2K
Dissent, which encompasses activism, is not only a democratic right but also a civic duty.
Gonzalinho
Pope’s Monthly Prayer Intentions
ReplyDeleteApostleship of Prayer
April 2021
Fundamental rights
We pray for those who risk their lives while fighting for fundamental rights under dictatorships, authoritarian regimes and even in democracies in crisis.
Link: http://popesprayerusa.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/INTENZIONI-DEL-PAPA-2021-ENG-DEF.pdf
Gonzalinho
A very clear personal threat to Liza (Soberano). This gov’t said citizens should not fear the Anti-Terrorism Bill (before it became law) but now the fears of citizens are coming true. Anyone who dares to comment, criticize, speak up can be red-tagged like Liza.
ReplyDelete@citizenjaneph
Philippine Daily Inquirer (October 23, 2020)
Gonzalinho
NTF-ELCAC IS A USELESS AGENCY
ReplyDeletePhilippine Daily Inquirer / 04:02 AM October 28, 2020
The penchant of the military, particularly the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac), to “red-tag” individuals and organizations regresses our culture. They are teaching the people not to think, not to be analytical, and instead just to follow (or else…). If there is something not to one’s liking, just be quiet and leave the future to fate. In Filipino, “bahala na.” This is the culture that was wrought upon us during the Spanish colonial era—do not speak, do not act, just wait for good fortune.
Because the colonialists then held economic and political (and thus military) powers, all those who spoke up against their rule were meted out harsh punishment and/or death. Those who dared to fight the colonial power, the leaders and the masses, paved the way for the development of nationhood. Those who resisted then are our heroes now.
The people’s issues are real and righteous—decent wages, affordable housing, land and support for farmers, education, health and public services for all, women’s rights, indigenous peoples’ right to self-determination, etc.
The NTF-Elcac is a useless and wasteful agency. Red-tagging will not solve the people’s issues.
JULIE L. PO
Linangan ng Kulturang Pilipino
jlp704@yahoo.com
If Parlade believes that Gabriela is an unlawful Party List organization, he can file a petition to cancel their registration with @COMELEC. But he should not accuse anyone without evidence. It’s unethical and Libelous.
@rowena_guanzon
Philippine Daily Inquirer (October 28, 2020)
Angel Locsin is on Gen. Parlade’s hit list because her sister Ella is an activist and she is a relative of Neri Colmenares. Shows you the dangers of guilt by association fostered by the new Anti-Terrorism Law.
Teddy Casiño, @teddycasino
Philippine Daily Inquirer (October 28, 2020)
Red-tagging is not the solution.
What is the solution?
Good governance.
Gonzalinho