Extrajudicial killings and forced
disappearances in the Philippines refer to the illegal
liquidations, unlawful or felonious
killings and forced
disappearances in the Philippines
. These are forms of extrajudicial punishment, and
include – extrajudicial executions, summary executions, arbitrary arrest and
detentions, and failed prosecutions due to political activities
of leading political, trades union, dissident and/or social
figures, left-wing political parties, non-governmental
organizations, political journalists, outspoken clergy, anti-mining
activists, agricultural reform activists, members of legal
political parties or organizations that the military claims are
allied with the communist movement or suspected supporters of the
NPA and its political wing, the Communist Party of the
Philippines (CPP) by either the state government, state
authorities like the armed forces and police (as in Liberia
under
Charles G. Taylor), or by criminal outfits such as
the Italian
Mafia.
Aside from
the Philippines
, extrajudicial killings, death squads and desaparecidos are most common in the
Middle East (mostly in Palestine and
Iraq
), among others.
Former
Philippine
Senate President Jovito
Salonga enumerated 3 main / current problems of the
Philippines: poverty, graft and corruption in government and
society, and increasing criminality including extrajudicial
killings.
Nature
Philippine extrajudicial killings are politically-motivated
murders committed by government officers,
punished by local and
international
law or
convention. They include:
assassinations; deaths due to strafing or
indiscriminate firing; massacre;
summary execution is done if the victim
becomes passive before the moment of death (i.e. forcible abduction
leading to death);
assassination means
forthwith or instant killing while
massacre is akin to
genocide or mass extermination; thus, killings
occurred in many regions or places throughout the Philippines in
different times - 136 killings in Southern Tagalog region were
recorded by human rights group
Karapatan
from 2001 to May 19, 2006.
A
forced disappearance
(desaparecidos), on the other hand, as form of
extrajudicial punishment is
perpetrated by government officers, when any of its public officers
abducts an individual, to vanish from
public
view, resulting to
murder or plain
sequestration. The victim is first
kidnapped, then illegally
detained in
concentration camps, often
tortured, and finally
executed and the
corpse
hidden. In
Spanish and
Portuguese, "disappeared people" are
called
desaparecidos, a term which specifically refers to
the mostly
South American victims of
state terrorism during the 1970s and
the 1980s, in particular concerning
Operation Condor. In the
International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance, "Enforced disappearance" is defined in
Article 2 of the
United Nations
Convention Against Torture as "
the arrest, detention,
abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty by agents of
the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with the
authorization, support or acquiescence of the State, followed by a
refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment
of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place
such a person outside the protection of the law."
Even if Philippine Republic Act No. 7438 provides for the rights of
persons arrested, detained, it does not punish acts of enforced
disappearances. Thus, on August 27,
Bayan
Muna (People First),
Gabriela Women’s
Party (GWP), and
Anakpawis (Toiling
Masses) filed House Bill 2263 - “An act defining and penalizing the
crime of enforced or involuntary disappearance.” Sen.
Jinggoy Estrada also filed last
June 30, 2007, Senate Bill No. 7 - “An Act
Penalizing the Commission of Acts of Torture and Involuntary
Disappearance of Persons Arrested, Detained or Under Custodial
Investigation, and Granting Jurisdiction to the Commission on Human
Rights to Conduct Preliminary Investigation for Violation of the
Custodial Rights of the Accused, Amending for this Purpose Sections
2, 3 and 4 of RA 7438, and for Other Purposes.”
- For extrajudicial executions see also Assassination
Background
Marcos regime
In 1995 10,000 Filipinos won a U.S. class-suit against the
Marcos estate. The charges were filed by
victims or their surviving relatives for torture, execution and
disappearances. Human rights groups placed the number of victims of
extrajudicial killings under martial law at 1500 and over 800
abductions;
Karapatan (a local human
rights group's) records show 759 involuntarily disappeared (their
bodies never found). Military historian
Alfred McCoy in his book "Closer than Brothers:
Manhood at the Philippine Military Academy" and in his speech "Dark
Legacy" cites 3,257 extrajudicial killings, 35,000 torture victims,
and 70,000 incarcerated during the Marcos years. The newspaper
"Bulatlat" places the number of victims of arbitrary arrest and
detention at 120,000.
Alfred W.
McCoy (b.
1945) is a historian and a Professor of History at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison
. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from Columbia College,
and his Ph.D in Southeastern Asian history from Yale University
.
The
New People's Army (NPA) groups
known as "Sparrow Units" were active in the mid-1980s, killing
government officials, police personnel, military members, and
anyone else they targeted for elimination. They were also part of
an NPA operation called "Agaw Armas" (
Filipino for "Stealing Weapons"), where
they raided government armories as well as stealing weapons from
slain military and police personnel. A low level
civil war with south
Moslems,
Al-Qaeda
sympathizers and
communist insurgents has
led to a general break down of
law and order. The
Philippines government has promised to curb the killings, but
is itself implicated in many of the killings.
Since 1975, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) was deeply
concerned in politics. Because of the armed conflict, the military
continued its campaign versus the New People’s Army of the
Communist Party of the
Philippines (CPP). Since 1969 it aimed to establish a Marxist
regime with armed
Rebellion against the
government. On top of all these chaos, left-wing non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) were/are critical of the
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
administration. The members who associated with the CPP and NPA had
been targeted as victims in the spate of political killings.
Human Rights Watch investigated
extrajudicial murders in the Philippines in September 2007.

Philip Alston
3 major investigation groups were commissioned and their final
reports had been submitted and published: the
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
government-appointed bodies: a) Task Force Usig created by her on
August; as a special police body, it was assigned to solve 10 cases
of killings; it claimed having solved 21 cases, by initiating court
cases, but only 12 suspects were arrested; b) the Melo Commission
(chaired by Supreme Court Associate Justice Jose Melo) with members
National Bureau of Investigation Director Nestor Mantaring, Chief
State Prosecutor Jovencito Zuño, Bishop Juan de dios Pueblos, and
Nelia Torres Gonzales; its final report states: "There is no
official or sanctioned policy on the part of the military or its
civilian superiors to resort to what other countries
euphemistically call “alternative procedures”—meaning illegal
liquidations. However, there is certainly evidence pointing the
finger of suspicion at some elements and personalities in the armed
forces, in particular General
Jovito
Palparan, as responsible for an undetermined number of
killings, by allowing, tolerating, and even encouraging the
killings."(Melo Commission report, p. 53), and c) the
United Nations Special
Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Executions (February 12 to 21,
2007) -
Philip Alston met with
government officials, civil society representatives, witnesses of
extrajudicial killings, and the family members of victims.
Philip Alston, John Norton Pomeroy Professor
of Law, is one of the foremost human rights thinkers.
He is a Professor at
NYU Law
School
, Director of the law school's Center for Human
Rights and Global Justice, and also the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary
executions. Recently, Alston was sent to Brazil to
investigate the
Complexo do Alemão
massacre.
Remedies
Malacañang's Peace Summit and Puno's Killings Summit
- Because of the magnitude of Philippine
killings and desaparecidos, 22nd Chief
Justice Reynato Puno / Supreme Court of the
Philippines called a National Consultative Summit on
extrajudicial killings on July 16 and 17,
2007 at the Manila
Hotel
. Invited representatives from the 3 branches
of the government participated (including the Armed Forces of the
Philippines, the PNP, CHR, media, academe,
civil society and other stakeholders).
On the
other hand, the Malacañang
-sponsored "Mindanao Peace and Security Summit"
(July 8-10, 2007 at Cagayan de
Oro City
) concentrated on the anti-terror law, or the Human
Security Act (HSA) of 2007, to make it more acceptable to the
public. At the July 16 summit, Reynato Puno stated that he Commission on Human
Rights reported the number of victims at 403 from 2001 to May 31,
2007, while Karapatan reported 863
deathsuntil 2007, and more than 900 as of May, 2008, and most of
them were members of left wing groups. Karapatan further officially placed the number of
victims of human rights violations: forced evacuations or
displacement at 7,442, by indiscriminate firing with 5,459 victims,
and food and economic blockade with 3,042. The rights group
Desparecidos officially reported as of May 15, 2008, 194 victims of
enforced disappearances under the Arroyo administration, with the
latest abduction of National Democratic Front political consultant
for Cagayan Valley, activist Randy Felix Malayao, 39, a volunteer
worker.
- Counsels for the Defense of Liberties (CODAL), Philippines, a
lawyers’ organization stated that since 2001, 26 lawyers and 10 judges were
killed due to their professions; 755 civilians had been killed
extrajudicially, while 359 survived attacks, but 184 persons were
still missing.
- Archbishop Deogracias Yniguez stated that on the CBCP / Catholic Church's
count, the number of victims of extrajudicial killings is 778,
while survivors of "political assassinations" reached 370; 203 "massacre"
were victims, 186, missing or involuntarily disappeared, 502,
tortured, or illegally arrested. Yniguez denounced the government's
implementation of its Oplan Bantay Laya I and II.
Promulgation of Writs of Amparo and Habeas Data
Because
of the inefficacy and insufficiency of the Philippines
Writ of Habeas
Corpus, on September 25, 2007, Chief
Justice Reynato Puno signed and
released the Writ of Amparo: "This rule will provide the victims of
extralegal killings and enforced disappearances the protection they
need and the promise of vindication for their rights. This
rule empowers our courts to issue reliefs that may be granted
through judicial orders of protection, production, inspection and
other relief to safeguard one's life and liberty The writ of amparo
shall hold public authorities, those who took their oath to defend
the constitution and enforce our laws, to a high standard of
official conduct and hold them accountable to our people. The
sovereign Filipino people should be assured that if their right to
life and liberty is threatened or violated, they will find
vindication in our courts of justice'." Puno explained the interim
reliefs under amparo: temporary protection order (TPO), inspection
order (IO), production order (PO), and witness protection order
(WPO, RA 6981).
As supplement to Amparo, on August 30, 2007,
Puno (at Silliman
University
in Dumaguete
City, Negros Oriental
) promised to release also the writ of habeas
data (“you should have the idea” or “you should
have the data”) another new legal remedy to solve the
extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances. Puno
explained that the
writ of amparo denies to authorities
defense of simple denial, and
habeas data can find out
what information is held by the officer, rectify or even the
destroy erroneous data gathered.
Brazil
used the
writ, followed by Colombia
, Paraguay
, Peru
, Argentina
and Ecuador
.
- On December 3, 2007, Reynato S. Puno stated that the writ released only 3
victims (including Luisito Bustamante, Davao City
), since amparo was enforced on October 24: "I would
like to think that after the enactment and effectivity (of the
writ), the number of extrajudicial killings and disappearances have
gone down."
- On
December 17, 2007, Iloilo
regional
trial court Judge Narciso Aguilar granted a writ of amparo against
President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo and 9 military and police officials to release
Nilo Arado and Maria Luisa Posa-Dominado activists abducted on
April 12.
- On December 19, 2007, Dra. Edita
Burgos petitioned the Philippine Court of Appeals to
issue a writ of amparo against Armed Forces chief Gen. Hermogenes
Esperon Jr and Army chief Lt. Gen. Alexander Yano regarding her son
Jonas's abduction on April 28.
- On December 27, 2007, the 2nd
Division, Court of Appeals 30-page decision penned by Associate
Justice Lucas Bersamin granted the writ of amparo filed by Reynaldo
and Raymond Manalo, abducted activists.
- For other legal remedies see also Writ of Amparo and
Habeas Data
International groups' 2006 and 2008 probe of killings
On 2006, the Dutch Lawyers for Lawyers Foundation and Lawyers
without Borders with the support of the Netherlands Bar
Association, the Amsterdam Bar Association and the International
Association of Democratic Lawyers created a fact-finding mission in
different parts of the Philippines. The international groups
conducted interviews of various legal sectors from June 15 to June
20, 2006.
From
November 4 to the 12th, 2008, the Dutch
Lawyers for Lawyers Foundation will conduct a follow-up
verification and fact finding mission (IVFFM) in Manila and
Mindanao
, with the National Host Committee, National Union
of Peoples' Lawyers (NUPL) and the Counsels for the Defense of
Liberties (CODAL). This team is composed of 8 judges and
lawyers from Belgium
and Netherlands
, who had dialogue with Reynato Puno on the probe of
killings.
International criticism
On September 28, 2007, the
Asian Human Rights Commission
(AHRC) criticized the
Writ of Amparo and
Habeas Data for being insufficient: "
Though it responds to
practical areas it is still necessary that further action must be
taken in addition to this. The legislative bodies,
House of
Representatives and Senate, should also initiate its
own actions promptly and without delay. They must enact
laws which ensure protection of rights—laws against torture and
enforced disappearance and
laws to afford adequate legal remedies to victims." AHRC
objected since the
writ failed to protect
non-witnesses, even if they too face threats or risk to their
lives.
International Reports - the root cause of killings
Alston UN Report
- Philip Alston submitted his final
report on the killings; he found that the Armed Forces of the
Philippines killed left-wing activists to get rid of communist
insurgents: "the executions had “eliminated civil society leaders,
including human rights defenders, trade unionists and land reform
advocates, intimidated a vast number of civil society actors, and
narrowed the country’s political discourse.” Alston denied for lack
of merit the government's claim that killings were perpetrated by
communists to exterminate spies and to make negative propaganda
versus government. Alston, on February, 2007 stated that the
military made alibis or denials on its role about 800 deaths of
activists and journalists since 2001. Alston blamed “impunity”
which caused the executions of journalists and leftist activists:
“the priorities of the criminal justice system had been
“distorted,” and had “increasingly focused on prosecuting civil
society leaders rather than their killers.” But Alston noted the
government's creation of - special courts to
try extrajudicial killings, the Melo Commission and the Philippine
National Police’s Task Force Usig. In the November U.N. Alston
report - the killings in 2007 was only 68, huge drop from the 209
murdered in 2006. Karapatan published its
report however, listing 830 victims of extrajudicial killings since
2001, under Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. On March
1, 2007, the Supreme Court of the
Philippines issued Administrative Order No. 25-2007, which
created by designation 99 regional trial courts to try cases of
killings and desaparecidos.
Failed Investigations and Prosecutions
- The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial
Execution found that just on paper trails, cases are filed; but
Alston officially concluded that “there is a passivity, bordering
on an abdication of responsibility, which affects the way in which
key institutions and actors approach their responsibilities in
relation to such human rights concerns; prosecutors refused to take
a role in gathering evidence, and instead being purely passive,
waiting for the police to present them with a file; the Ombudsman’s
office did almost nothing in recent years in this regard, failing
to act in any of the 44 complaints alleging extrajudicial
executions attributed to State agents submitted from 2002 to 2006."
(“Preliminary note on the visit of the Special Rapporteur on
extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Philip Alston, to
the Philippines (12-21 February 2007),” A/HRC/4/20/Add.3, March 22,
2007, p. 4., etc.)
The Eric G. John and G. Eugene Martin Testimonies
- On March 14, 2007, Eric G. John, Deputy
Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs testified
before the USA Senate Subcommittee on Foreign Relations at Washington
, DC. John submitted his written statement:
a) the increase in extrajudicial killings, b) the “Huk Rebellion”
in the 1940s and 50s causing thousands of murdered victims; c) the
communist New People’s Army (NPA), which was listed in the U.S.
State
Department list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations campaigned
to overthrow the government since 1968; d) Extrajudicial killings
by the security forces, the NPA, etc. during the Marcos regime,
were less; and e) noted the report of UN Special Rapporteur Alston
which submitted the Philippine Government’s recognition of the
gravity of the problem, expresses concern about the views of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) regarding the problem, but
much had to be done.
- G. Eugene Martin, U.S. Institute of Peace Executive Director of
the Philippine Facilitation Project, testified before the Senate
Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs,
and submitted to it the Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC)
statement on the killings, a Joint Statement submitted by the World
Council of Churches, the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and
Development and the Asian Legal Resource Center (ALRC) to the 6th
Human Rights Council. Martin stated that the Philippine government
said that it implemented measures to stop the killings, but he
submitted that the reforms made did not and will not resolve the
killings. Mr. Alston's March report stated that "the question of
resources or technical expertise will partly resolve the killings
but the strong risk is that these measures will treat only some of
the symptoms of the crisis, and will fail to address meaningfully
two of the most important underlying causes of a great many of the
killings." (A/HRC/4/20/Add.3, March 22, 2007) Alston named 2 root
causes of the killings a) 'vilification', 'labeling’, or guilt by
association” - "characterization of most groups on the left of the
political spectrum as ‘front organizations’ for armed groups whose
aim is to destroy democracy" making the groups "considered to be
legitimate targets; and b) the 2nd cause is the Government’s
counter-insurgency strategy's extent of facilitating killings of
activists and others. G. Eugene Martin specifically expanded the 2
causes of the violence and killings: a) weak political and social
institutions, corrupt and ineffective judicial system, resulting to
failure to obtain justice from corrupt Philippine courts; and b)
the legacy of the Ferdinand Marcos
regime; Martial law caused the corrupt
system where soldiers, police, judges and prosecutors became
principals of offenses like extralegal arrest, detention,
incarceration, disappearances and killings (salvaging), all
permitted or allowed. He traced the spate of violence and killings
to political instability of President Arroyo government; while she
created the Independent Commission to Address Media and Activist
Killings, Melo Commission, she had no capability to end the
killings, due to her political lameness because of the 2004
election controversy.
FIDH Report
- 3 FIDH experts, Mr. Nabeel Rajab (Bahrain), Mr. Mouloud
Boumghar (France) and Mr. Frédéric Ceuppens (Belgium), came to the
Philippines on August 13 to 23, 2007. Their FIDH mission report
stated that torture and ill-treatment was widespread versus
suspected “terrorists”. The Filipino government is a signatory to
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR),
and the UN Convention against Torture (CAT). The FIDH dismissed the
Philippines government's claim doubts that mechanisms were placed
to stop the killings, as it questioned the efficiency of - the
corrupt judiciary, the government “Witness Protection Programme” ;
also, judges and lawyers were victims themselves of killings. It
also found the Philippine anti-terrorism law ( “Human Security
Act”) to result in more torture and extrajudicial killings as a
fight against terrorism.
2008 US Department of State Report
On March
11, 2008, the US Department of State
reported that "arbitrary, unlawful arrests and
extrajudicial and political killings continued to be a major
problem in the Philippines in 2007" (Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices - 2007, Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human
Rights, and Labor March 11, 2008[599738]). Washington
stated that "many of these killings went unsolved
and unpunished despite intensified efforts of the government to
investigate and prosecute these cases."
Judicial corruption
On
January 25, 2005, and on December 10, 2006, Philippines
Social Weather
Stations released the results of its 2 surveys on corruption in
the judiciary; it published that: a) like
1995, 1/4 of lawyers said many/very many
judges are corrupt. But (49%) stated
that a judges received bribes, just 8% of lawyers admitted they
reported the
bribery, because they could not
prove it. [Tables 8-9]; judges, however, said, just 7% call
many/very many judges as corrupt[Tables 10-11];b) "Judges see some
corruption; proportions who said - many/very many corrupt judges or
justices: 17% in reference to RTC judges, 14% to MTC judges, 12% to
Court of Appeals justices, 4% i to Shari'a Court judges, 4% to
Sandiganbayan justices and 2% in
reference to Supreme Court justices [Table 15].
Recent Events
- On February, 2007, The U.S. ambassador to the Philippines has
broken her silence and called on Manila to end extrajudicial
killings. On Feb. 27, U.S. ambassador Kristie Kenney U.S. ambassador to the
Philippines alerted Mrs. Arroyo as she voiced her call to end these
killings: "Let's beef up the human rights in the Armed Forces of
the Philippines and make every effort to investigate, prosecute
those responsible, [and] exonerate the innocent."
- On September, 2007, Marie Hilao-Enriquez, Karapatan secretary-general, formally petitioned
the United Nations
Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to direct the Philippine
government to stop the extrajudicial killings. She filed the report
on 60 cases killings have been recorded by Karapatan from January
to June, 2007, alone, with 17 cases of disappearances, 12 of
torture and 113, of illegal arrests.
- The December 11 2006 Philippines
National Police’s Task Force Usig submitted 115 cases of “slain
party list /militant members” since 2001, and 26 cases of
“mediamen.” The Philippine
Daily Inquirer published 299 killings from October 2001 and
April 2007 (See e.g. Alcuin Papa, “3 US solons to PNP: Respect
human rights,” Philippine Daily Inquirer, April 18, 2007)
- The December, 2007 year end report of Karapatan (Alliance for the Advance of People’s
Rights) noted only 68 extrajudicial killings vis-a-vis year 2006
209 victims. Karapatan also reported 16,307 human rights violations
just for 2007 (which include killings to forcible displacement of
communities). Therefore, aside from the 887 killings since 2001
under Mrs. Arroyo, Karapatan, just for 2007, underscored 35 victims
of political killings; 26, of enforced or involuntary
disappearance; 8, of abduction; 29, of torture; 129, of illegal
arrest; 116, of illegal detention; 330, of threat, harassment and
intimidation; 7,542, of forcible evacuation or displacement, 3,600,
of “hamletting”, interalia. As only solution, it petitioned the
resignation of Mrs. Arroyo. (with 356 left-wing activists
murdered). The Philippines armed forces battled the Communists
since 1969, with about 40,000 victims killed, and it had to ward
off killings by Muslim radicals. However, Justice Undersecretary
Ricardo Blancaflor, head of Task Force on Political Violence
contradicted Karapatan's submission only on the number of killings.
PNP's Task Force Usig, according to Blancaflor noted only 141
cases, of which, only 114 are party list members or leftist
activists.
- On December 13, 2007, Philippine
Human Rights Commissioner Dominador Calamba III, at the Philippine
Working Group for an Asean Human Rights Mechanism forum denounced
the failure of the government in its treaty reporting to the
United Nations, due to "13 reports
overdue." (reports due on implementation of international covenants
signed by the Philippines to solve discrimination, forced
disappearances and extrajudicial killings). Calamba reported 383
killings filed with the CHR, of which 145 were extrajudicial or
political in form.
- On January 1, 2008, the National Union of Journalists
(NUJ) paid tribute to 171 journalists
killed in 2007. Citing data published by International Federation
of Journalists: Iraq
was number
one, with 65 deaths; in the Philippines
, 6 journalists killed on 2007 were Hernani
Pastolero (Sultan Kudarat), Carmelito Palacios (Nueva Ecija), Dodie
Nunez (Cavite), Geruncio "Oscar" Mondejar (Mandaue), Vicente
Sumalpong (Tawi-Tawi) and Fernando "Batman" Lintuan (Davao City);
54 journalists were murdered under the administration of President
Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo. In 2006, INSI stated that the
Philippines was the 2nd most dangerous country for journalists,
next to Iraq, listing 15 work-related journalists murdered.
On
January 4, 2008, the International Federation
of Journalists (IFJ) Asia-Pacific director Jacqueline Park
denounced the murders of broadcasters
Fernando Lintuan in Davao
City
and former journalist Romelito Oval, Jr. It
petitioned the Philippine
government to fully investigate 2007 journalists'
killings: "5 journalists as well as Oval were killed in the
Philippines in 2007, which is shocking and reveals the extreme
dangers that journalists face every day in trying to carry out
their work. There will be no press freedom in the
Philippines until this (situation) changes."
- On January 9, 2008, PNP Task Force Usig announced that 3
policemen, 11 soldiers and 3 militiamen
had been arrested or named suspects in killings of media men and
militants since 2001. Director Jefferson P. Soriano submitted the
report with the 17 names to PNP chief Avelino Razon. As of December 10, TF Usig prosecuted 113 killings
cases of party-list members, leftist activists and 27
journalists.
- Twin horrible deaths happened on / circa the same day last
year, January 15, 2007, that the Supreme Court of the
Philippines' (logo or seal) was mysteriously burned into halves by
an almost one hour afternoon fire. Despite
different appeals by local and international groups, the spate of
extrajudicial killings in the Philippines continued. On January 15, 2008,
Reynato Puno condemned the murder of Judge Roberto Navidad, Regional Trial
Court, Branch 32, Calbayog
City
, Samar
, the 15th
judge to be ambushed since July 20, 1999, the 14th under the Arroyo
government. Just starting his engine, black Nissan Patrol SUV ( TPL-911), Natividad was
shot in the face / left eye, at 7:10 p.m. Monday, by a lone gunman,
5’4" tall and medium-built, wearing black jacket, using a 45
caliber pistol. On Tuesday, Catholic missionary Rey
Roda, Oblates of Marry Immaculate (OMI), 54, was shot dead at 8:30
p.m., when he resisted abduction attempt by unidentified 10 armed
men in a chapel at ikud Tabawan village, South Ubian, Tawi-Tawi
, South Ubian. In February 1997,
another OMI leader, Bishop Benjamin de Jesus was shot dead in front
of the Jolo
cathedral. In 2006, the Asian Human Rights Commission
stated that there had been 26 priests, pastors, and churchmen who were liquidate or were
victims of violence under the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
administration since 2001. This includes 3 priests who were reported
killed just in 2007: Basilio Bautista of the Iglesia Filipina
Reform Group, in Surigao
del Sur
, Indonesian priest Fransiskus Madhu, in Kalinga
province, and Catholic priest Florante Rigonan, in Ilocos Norte
. On January 19, 2008, the Catholic Bishops
Conference of the Philippines (quoting from a letter of
Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarciso
Bertone), announced that Pope Benedict
XVI "praised the courage of, and was saddened over the brutal
and tragic killing of Fr. Reynaldo Roda in his ministry as head of
Notre Dame School." The Pope wrote Jolo
Bishop
Angelito Lampon: "calls upon the perpetrators to renounce the ways
of violence and to play their part in building a just and peaceful
society, where all can live together in harmony."
- On January 16, 2008, the New York-based international democracy
watchdog Freedom House dropped or
relegated the "freedom status" of the Philippines to partially free
from a list of totally free countries. It based its Philippine
status downgrade on the spate of political killings, "specifically
targeting left-wing political activists in the country, freedom in
the sloped downward."
- On January 18, 2008, the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas
(KMP), led by KMP chairman Rafael "Ka Paeng" Mariano (president of
the Anakpawis), condemned the January 12
kidnapping and January 16 extrajudicial
killing and torture of their farmer and
local leader Teldo Rebamonte, 45, Masbate People’s Organization
(who was supposed to join the commemoration of the Mendiola
Massacre) in Barangay Nabasagan, Concepcion in Claveria, Burias
Island, Masbate.
- On January 23, 2008, (or in just 9 days after the murder of a
priest) Pastor Felicisimo Catambis, 60, of the United Church of
Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) in Catugan, Barangay (village)
Balucawe, Leyte town was shot dead by a still
unknown assailant.
- On
March 14, 2008, Filipino lawyer Edre
Olalia (lead officer of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers and
the Counsels for the Defense of Liberties) brought the Philippine
case and appealed to the United Nations Human Rights Council
(UNHRC), in its 7th Geneva
session "to
stop the extrajudicial killings and abductions in the
Philippines". Philippines killings will be examined in the
first UNHRC session, periodic review from April 7 to 18, along with
those in 15 others of 192 member-countries.
- Deepak Obhrai, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of
Foreign Affairs, in a statement at Canada's House of Commons,
commended "the laudable role of the Supreme Court in the
preservation of human rights and in the pursuit of justice."
Canadian Ambassador Robert Desjanis sent the document to Chief
Justice Reynato Puno "to underline the
value that the government of Canada attaches to your efforts in
this regard as well as to our continued collaboration in the
Justice Reform Initiatives Support Project."
- In the March, 2008 US Department of State, 2007 Country Reports
on Human Rights Practices, the US found that extrajudicial and
political killings, including those of journalists, by members of
the military, police, Communist rebels and other terrorist groups /
perpetrators continue to be a major problem in the Philippines. The
report added that “despite intensified efforts by the Philippine
government to investigate and prosecute these cases, many went
unsolved and unpunished.”
- The delegates to the 6th Congress of the National Union of Journalists
of the Philippines (NUJP), led by chairman Jose Torres Jr. renewed
calls to an end to unabated media killing. It reported that the
list of journalists murdered swelled from
60 in 2001 to 96 in 2008. The most recent victims were gunned down
local radio broadcasters of Radio
Mindanao Network, Dennis Cuesta from General
Santos City
, and Martin Roxas of Roxas City
, Capiz. The NUJP declared
August 20, a "National Day of Mourning" as
journalists wore black in protest, as they
paid tribute to slain media practitioners at the Bantayog ng mga
Bayani in Quezon
City
.
See also
External links
Monitoring organizations
- icaed.org,
International campaign for UN Convention to protect all persons
from enforced disappearance
- Desaparecidos.org www.desaparecidos.org (in English
& Spanish)
- "The Commissar Vanishes" — Nikolai Yezhov airbrushed out of a picture with Stalin;
- www.ic-mp.org,The International Commission on Missing
Persons
- www2.ohchr.org, Official Website
- news.bbc.co.uk, BBC News Special on Special
Rapporteurs
- Amnesty International
- Human Rights Watch
- www.gmanews.tv, List of 15 JUDGES KILLED SINCE
1999
- www.manilatimes.net, Manila Times List of 15 JUDGES
KILLED SINCE 1999
- I-TEAM REPORT - ‘Political killings not official
but an unintended policy’
- supremecourt.gov.ph, National Summit on Extra
Judicial Killings
- omct.org, World Organization Against
Torture
- List of Issues arising from the Initial-Fourth
Periodic Report of the Philippines to the Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights Philippines
- extrajudicialexecutions.org/ extrajudicialexecutions.org,
Philippines: Editorial on the Davao Death Squad and Killing of
Journalists
- Philip Alston, UN Special Rapporteur on
Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions
- extrajudicialexecutions.org, About the Special Rapporteur
on Extrajudicial Executions
- newsbreak.com.ph/index, Karapatan's 2007 Year-end
Report on the HR Situation
- extrajudicialexecutions.org, Special Rapporteur’s
report on the Philippines
- stopthekillings.org, Dangerous, Regime, Defiant People -
KARAPATAN 2007 Human Rights Report
- stopthekillings.org, KARAPATAN 2007 Human Rights
Report
- List of Extrajudicial Killings as of April 25,
2006, Karapatan Documentation Committee
- List of Extrajudicial Killings as of April 25,
2006, Karapatan Documentation Committee
- pnp.gov.ph, REBUTTALS TO ALLEGATIONS MADE BY
WITNESSES DURING THE U.S. SENATE SUB-COMMITTEE ON EAST ASIAN AND PACIFIC
AFFAIRS‛“HEARING ON VIOLENCE RELATED TO EXTRA-JUDICIAL KILLINGS IN
THE PHILIPPINES” HELD ON 14 MARCH 2007
- US Department of State, Philippines, International
Religious Freedom Report 2007, Released by the Bureau of Democracy,
Human Rights, and Labor
- 2007 International Religious Freedom Report
- US Department of State, Philippines, Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2007, Released by the Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 11, 2008
- Journalists condemn unsolved media killings, May 3,
2008
- RP, others top 'Impunity Index' for slain journalists, May
3, 2008
References
- radiopinoyusa.com, U.N. RAPPORTEUR: PHILIPPINE
MILITARY IMPLICATED IN EXTRA-JUDICIAL MURDERS AND POLITICAL
KILLINGS
- hrw.org/reports, I. Summary
- hrw.org/reports/2007, Scared Silent, Impunity for
Extrajudicial Killings in the Philippines
- globalresearch.ca, Torture and Extrajudicial
Killings in Iraq
- electronicintifada.net, Extrajudicial
Killings
- web.amnesty.org, USA: An Extrajudicial Execution by
the CIA?
- thirdworldtraveler.com, soccerdad.baltiblogs.com,
Extra-judicial killings, hamas style
- www.gwu.edu, Death Squads in El Salvador: A Pattern
of U.S. Complicity
- El Salvador, War, Peace, and Human Rights,
1980-1994
- www.pinoyhr.net, Stop Extrajudicial Killing in the
Philippines
- www.pcusa.org, ‘Graft and corruption’
- www.supremecourt.gov.ph, ENDING EXTRAJUDICIAL
KILLINGS AND ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCES: REFRAMING THE NATIONAL
SECURITY PARADIGM AND PUTTING HUMAN RIGHTS AT THE HEART OF THE
PROCESS - WIGBERTO E. TAÑADA
- A Primer on Killings of Activists, bY
BAYAN
- iht.com, Europeans to join investigation of extrajudicial
killings in the Philippines
- www.ohchr.org, United Nations Human Rights
- www.ohchr.org, Philippines
- lawphil.net, REPUBLIC ACT No. 7438, AN ACT DEFINING
CERTAIN RIGHTS OF PERSON ARRESTED, DETAINED OR UNDER CUSTODIAL
INVESTIGATION AS WELL AS THE DUTIES OF THE ARRESTING, DETAINING AND
INVESTIGATING OFFICERS, AND PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATIONS
THEREOF
- www-rohan.sdsu.edu, Comparative Criminology | Asia
- Philippines
- bulatlat.com/2007, Bill Criminalizing Enforced
Disappearances to be Filed, Gov’t Asked to Ratify International
Convention
- newsinfo.inquirer.net, 131 solons sign bill vs
enforced, involuntary disappearances
- hartford-hwp.com, Dark Legacy: Human rights under
the Marcos regime By Alfred McCoy, 20 September 1999
- scotsman.com, No hero's resting place as Imelda
Marcos finds site for husband's grave
- indybay.org, Global Justice and Anti-Capitalism
- history.wisc.edu, Alfred W. McCoy McCoy, J.R.W.
Smail Professor of History
- www.pinoyhr.net,Stop Killings in the Philippines
- philippinerevolution.net, website, CCP
- philippinerevolution.net, website NPA
- www.hartford-hwp.com, Dark Legacy: Human rights
under the Marcos regime By Alfred McCoy, 20 September 1999
Professor of History at the University of
Wisconsin–Madison
- www.hurights.or.jp, Extrajudicial, Summary or
Arbitrary Executions In the Philippines, 2001–2006
- www.pcij.org, Karapatan’s 2007 human rights
report
- hrw.org/reports/2007, Recent Military Relations with
Government and Civil Society
- Interview with Philip Alston
- Inquirer.net, SC slates summit on extrajudicial
killings
- GMA NEWS.TV, Chief Justice unfazed by Palace
meet
- opinion.inquirer.net, Extrajudicial killings ‘View
from the mountaintop’ SPECIAL REPORT Extrajudicial killings, Even
lawyers, court officials weren’t spared
- JAN-MAR 2008, 96 cases of right violations recorded
-- Karapatan
- gmanews.tv, Activist is 194th victim of 'enforced
disappearances' - group
- manilatimes.net, SPECIAL REPORT Extrajudicial
killings, Even lawyers, court officials weren’t spared
- www5.gmanews.tv, RA 9372, Anti-Terror Law,
Philippines
- GMA NEWS.TV, Justices, activists, prelates map out
ways to end killings
- GMA NEWS.TV, CPP: SC summit can’t stop mastermind
of killings
- Inquiret.net, Let's engage in a conspiracy of
Hope
- ABS-CBN Interactive, More groups ask Supreme Court to junk
antiterror law
- Inquirer.net, SC approves use of writ of
amparo
- Supremecourt.gov.ph, A.M. No. 07-9-12-SC, THE RULE ON THE
WRIT OF AMPARO
- S.C. Resolution, A.M. No. 07-9-12-SC, THE RULE ON
THE WRIT OF AMPARO
- Supremecourt.gov.ph, SC Approves Rule on Writ of
Amparo
- GMA NEWS.TV, SC approves rule on writ of amparo vs
extralegal killings
- Inquirer.net, Habeas data: SC’s new remedy vs
killings, disappearances
- GmaNews.tv, 'Amparo' frees 3 detainees - SC
chief
- inquirer.net, Iloilo court issues amparo writ for
two missing activists
- gmanews.tv/story, Jonas Burgos mother files writ of
amparo
- inquirer.net/breakingnews, CA: Palparan, military
had hand in brothers’ abduction
- mindanaoexaminer.com, Human Rights Fact-Finding
Mission Begins In The Philippines
- inquirer.net/breakingnews, Int'l lawyers back for
rights probe
- [Int'l group to probe killings of Lawyers, Philippine Daily
Inquirer, page A4, November 4, 2008]
- GMA NEWS.TV, Writ of amparo not enough – Hong Kong
rights group
- newsinfo.inquirer.net, Alston report: AFP behind
killings, Report rejects RP claim of Red purge
- Philip Alston, UN Special Rapporteur on
Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions
- ipsnews.net/news, CHALLENGES 2007-2008: Short Shrift for
Human Rights in South-east Asia
- newsinfo.inquirer.net, Chief Justice unfazed by
Palace meet
- hrw.org/reports, Failures to Investigate and
Prosecute
- hrw.org, Lives destroyed, Attacks on civilians in the
Philippines
- www.state.gov Extrajudicial Killings in the
Philippines: Strategies to End the Violence
- www.alrc.net, [ALRC Joint Statement PHILIPPINES:
Extrajudicial killings]
- www.usip.org, Briefings and Congressional Testimony
- Testimony of G. Eugene Martin
- www.senate.gov, Extrajudicial Killings In The
Philippines: Strategies To End The Violence
- www.fidh.org, Philippines International
Fact-Finding Mission
- www.abs-cbnnews.com, US: Political killings still a
problem in RP
- www.sws.org.ph, New Diagnostic Study Sets Guideposts for
Systematic Development of the Judiciary
- www.sws.org.ph, New SWS Study of the Judiciary and the
Legal Profession Sees Some Improvements, But Also Recurring
Problems
- worldpoliticsreview.com, Philippines Reeling From
Revelations of Extrajudicial Killings
- GMA NEWS.TV, RP has high number of 'disappeared' -
HK group
- desaparecidos.org, Phl - Groups ask UNHRC to act on
political killings in RP
- ahrchk.net, A Statement by the Asian Human Rights
Commission, PHILIPPINES: Bishop is latest victim of extrajudicial
killing
- hrw.org/reports/2007, Suspected Political Killings
as Reported in the Philippines Daily Inquirer during 2006
- inquirer.net, Int’l pressure leads to decline in
killings--Karapatan
- news.bbc.co.uk, Philippines army is 'in
denial'
- newsinfo.inquirer.net, Blancaflor slams Karapatan
for ‘exaggerated’ killings data
- newsinfo.inquirer.net, COMMISSIONER Dominador
Calamba III of the Commission on Human Rights said the current
human rights situation in the Philippines was "appalling."
- Abs-Cbn Interactive, NUJ pays tribute to 171 journalists
killed in 2007
- GMA NEWS.TV, Int'l group calls for deeper probe
into journalist killings
- Inquirer.net, Probe killing of labor
leaders--Beltran
- www.gmanews.tv/story, 33 of 144 labor leaders
killed around world in '07 from RP
- www.malaya.com.ph, 17 gov’t men held, probed on
killings
- www.supremecourt.gov.ph, image of supreme court
logo halved by fire at session hall
- www.supremecourt.gov.ph, Fire at SC
- Abs-Cbn Interactive, Supreme Court condemns ambush of
Samar judge
- www.bosnewslife, BREAKING NEWS: Philippines Priest
Killed In Kidnap Attempt, Killing Comes After Assassination Of
Judge
- www.allheadlinenews.com, Spate Of Killings Continue
In Philippines, Judge, Priest Killed
- www.gmanews.tv, Priest, judge slain, as spate of RP
killings remains unsolved
- www.usatoday.com, Pope praises courage of slain
Philippine priest
- Abs-Cbn Interactive, Int'l democracy watchdog: RP only
'partly free'
- Abs-Cbn Interactive, KMP: Farmer tortured, killed in
Burias Islands
- gmanews.tv/story, Carpenter, ex-detainee latest
victims of killings – Karapatan
- Inquirer.net, Protestant pastor shot dead in
Leyte
- Inquirer.net, RP lawyer takes extra-judicial
killings to UN
- Inquirer.net, Canada lauds SC for efforts vs
killings, disappearances
- Killings still major problem in Philippines--US
report
- gmanews.tv/story, 96th victim of media killings
laid to rest as journalists call for justice
- gmanews.tv/story, NUJP: Aug 20 is 'Day of
Mourning,' wear black