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Human rights in the Philippines roundup

March-April 2019

The biggest human-rights news in March-April 2019 is the killing of 14 farmers in three towns of Negros Oriental province in the wee hours of March 30. The military and police launched “drug war”-style operations in the area, claiming that they were serving arrest warrants to members of armed group New People’s Army (NPA) and that the latter “fought back (nanlaban).”

Condemning the killings, the families of the victims claim that the victims were sleeping when the police and military knocked on their doors, that they did not know any court case against them, that they are definitely not NPAs, and that most of them are not even peasant activists. Please read the final report of the National Fact-finding and Solidarity Mission in Negros Oriental held on April 4-8.

The killings became a focal point in the struggle against the repressive and outright fascist policies of the government of Rodrigo Duterte. Progressive organizations called for a Global Day of Action on April 10 to condemn the killings, and many individuals and organizations from around the world responded with solidarity for the Filipino people and condemnation of the killings.

The following members and leaders of people’s organizations were victims of extra-judicial killing in the two months:

>> March 12 — James Vinas, 72, former partylist group Bayan Muna’s coordinator in Borongan, Eastern Samar. He was shot dead by two motorcycle-riding men.

>> March 15 — Jerome Pangadas, 15-year old member of Ata-Manobo indigenous peoples and student in a community-run school in Talaingod, Davao del Norte. He was killed when a member of the military’s auxiliary unit opened fire on the house where he was watching television.

>> March 18 — Larry Suganob, 42, member of Pinagbuklod, an affiliate of peasant organization Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas in San Jose del Monte, Bulacan. He was about to take a bath outside his house when he was gunned by two men riding a motorcycle. This happened at a time when the military was actively making rounds in his area.

>> April 26 — Pining Lebico, barangay captain in Las Navas, Northern Samar, was shot dead a few meters away from a military camp. Karapatan’s Eastern Visayas chapter claims that the military has been active in the area days before Lebico’s killing and was responsible for the death of a 10-year old child. Lebico is a relative of the child, and was soliciting support in the town proper for the child’s burial. Before this, he has submitted to the provincial capitol petitions of his constituents calling for the military’s pull-put from their area.

Datu Kaylo Bontulan, a leader of many Lumad organizations and national leader of Sandugo, an alliance of national minorities, died on April 7 during an aerial bombardment in Kitaokitao, Bukidnon. The military claimed that he was killed in a clash with the NPA, but Bontulan was a civilian and was consulting Lumad leaders in the province when he was killed. He is well-known to many students and activists in Metro Manila, having discussed the situation and struggles of the Lumad and acted as the translator of Lumad leader and icon Bai Bibyaon Ligkayan Bigkay.

On April 22, Bernardino Patigas, 72, a city council member in Escalante City in Negros Occidental who is running for reelection, was shot dead by two motorcycle-riding men. He was riding his motorcycle, was hailed by the men, stopped, and was shot. He is a founder of the regional affiliate of human-rights organization Karapatan. He is a long-time activist, a survivor of the Escalante Massacre in 1986 in which killed between 20 to 30 farmers, and a legendary activist figure in the region. After his assassination, a leader of umbrella organization Bagong Alyansang Makabayan in the province received text messages naming the leaders of progressive organizations there and saying that they are next to be killed.

Meanwhile, Cindy Tirado, 28, a woman combatant of the NPA, was killed in a reported encounter between the armed group and the military in Tagum City, Davao del Norte in April 15. Tirado’s mother, however, claims that her daughter did not engage the military in a firefight, was alive when she was arrested, was tortured under military custody, and was found dead with her vagina “shattered with a bullet.” It bears remembering that Duterte had earlier called on the military to do precisely that — shoot NPA women in the vagina.

Deodicto Minosa, 60, member of partylist group Anakpawis was reported missing by his family on March 24. He was last seen on March 20, after saying he will go to his farm in San Luis, Aurora. His family was told to look for him in the nearest military camp. His family claims that before being disappeared, intelligence agents went to Minosa’s house and looked for him and his son.

A political detainee, Franco “Pangkoy” Romeroso, 38, died because of an illness on April 19. Romeroso is one of the “Morong 43” health workers who were arrested in February 2010 and released in December 2010. He was arrested again on March 27 in Ternate, Cavite on the basis of trumped-up charges. He is the fourth political prisoner to die under the Duterte government.

Meanwhile, on March 31, 28 Lumad families composed of 168 persons, were forced to leave their homes in Lianga, Surigao del Sur because of aerial bombings made by military helicopters, the firing of canon artillery, and strafing by the military in their area.

The Duterte regime’s Synchronized Enhanced Managing of Police Operations (SEMPO) or “Oplan Sauron” is in full effect in the Negros region. This has caused the revival of Negros Oriental province’s ordinance which states that “written permission from the office of the governor is required before conducting medical or fact-finding missions.”

Karapatan called for the scrapping of the said provision which it describes as “repressive and patently unconstitutional. Such ordinances and acts deny much-needed aid for civilians, and it violates basic freedoms including the right to privacy and the right to defend people’s rights.”

Two consultants of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines in its peace talks with the government were arrested in this period. Their arrest puts the number of NDFP consultants imprisoned by the Duterte government to six.

First was Renante Gamara, 61, a unionist and trade-union organizer, on the evening of March 20 in Imus City, Cavite. He was arrested with his companion, former priest Arturo Balagat, 72. Both were arrested and imprisoned on the basis of trumped-up charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives

Second was Franciso “Frank” Fernandez, 71, a well-known priest-turned-rebel in the Negros region, on March 24 in Liliw, Laguna. He was arrested with his wife, Cleofe Lagtapon, 66, while seeking medical treatment. Police claimed the two had pending arrest warrants for cases of murder, robbery, and illegal possession of firearms.

The Duterte government again arrested well-known journalist and editor of online newsmagazine Rappler.com Maria Ressa at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila on March 28 using a new set of fabricated charges. She was immediately released after paying a US$ 1,700 bail. Her arrest came in the midst of continued Distributed Denial of Service attacks on websites of organizations and media organizations critical of the government.

Even grassroots activist leaders in Metro Manila and nearby regions are not spared from illegal arrests based on fake charges. On March 20, Eugene Garcia, president of the workers’ union in the Chinese-owned Pioneer Float Glass Manufacturing Inc. was arrested in his home in Pasig City in Metro Manila. The police claimed it was serving an arrest warrant, but witnesses claim that policemen planted a gun that was used as the basis for arresting Garcia.

Reynaldo Remias, Jr. and John Griefen Arlegui, members of urban poor group Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap in Pandi, Bulacan, went missing on April 14. The following day, they were found in Malolos, Bulacan, imprisoned over illegal possession of firearms.

The Duterte government stepped up its red-tagging campaign in March and April. Various organizations accused by Brig. Gen. Antonio Parlade, starting from his press conference on March 13, of being fronts of the Communist Party of the Philippines condemned his statements. Karapatan issued strongly-worded statements criticizing Parlade’s tirades.

Karapatan, together with one or some of the organizations accused, filed a case before the Commission on Human Rights, the Joint Monitoring Committee of the NDFP-GRP peace talks and United Nations rapporteurs. The International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines in the US, relatives of victims of human-rights violations, political detainees, and Karapatan’s chapter in Southern Mindanao Region all released statements condemning the red-tagging.

On March 17, the Duterte governments’ withdrawal from the International Criminal Court took effect. The withdrawal is widely seen as an attempt to avoid accountability before the court for the government’s numerous violations of the Filipino people’s human rights. Karapatan takes special care to note that even if the Duterte government has withdrawn from the ICC, it can still be tried by the latter for crimes committed while it was still a member.

Facing mounting criticisms and opposition for his various policies — “glaring failures in his flagship fascist policies, allegations on the complicity of the government in the illegal drug trade, exposed onerous deals with China and embarrassing handling of the West Philippine Sea issue, and escalating human rights violations,” in Karapatan’s words — Duterte threatened to suspend the writ of habeas corpus on April 4. This threat was met with widespread criticism from various political groups in the country.

Karapatan issued its 2018 year-end report on the human-rights situation in the Philippines; please read it here. The Supreme Court on April 2 allowed the release of documents pertinent to the Duterte government’s “drug war,” which has supposedly killed more than 20,000 suspected drug addicts and users, most of whom come from the poorest section of the population. This is seen as a victory in the fight for human rights in the country, which must be utilized and defended.

Global condemnation of the Duterte regime’s human-rights record continues to spread and grow stronger, notably in the US, where organizations are calling on the US government to stop supporting the repressive Duterte regime.


Most of the data presented in this roundup comes from Karapatan, an alliance of individuals, groups and organizations working for the promotion and protection of human rights in the Philippines. Collated and contributed by ICHRP-Africa

Starting 2019 with a bang

The government of Rodrigo Duterte welcomed 2019 with a bang, continuing its violations of Filipinos’ human rights into its mid-term.

The killing spree continues both under the so-called “war on drugs” and the counter-insurgency program Oplan Kapayapaan.

The most high-profile victim of extra-judicial killing at the beginning of the year is Randy Felix Malayao, a consultant of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines in the peace talks with the government. Malayao was shot and killed by a still-unknown assailant while sleeping inside a bus at a stopover in Aritao, Nueva Vizcaya on January 30.

The government tried to besmirch his name, but there was an outpouring of tributes from his friends and comrades in the activist and revolutionary movements.

The following farmers were also victims of extra-judicial killings:

>> Albert Espenas, 39, in San Francisco, Quezon, on January 8. He was manning his store and was shot by unidentified men who feigned buying from him. His death was used as a pretext to militarize his village.

>> Remeglo Arquilos, in Guihulngan City, Negros Oriental on January 11. He was a habalhabal driver who was flagged down by armed men while transporting passengers. The men immediately shot him four times and then left.

>> Nicasio Ebo, 37, in Bacon, Sorsogon on January 11. While standing near the barangay hall, he was shot dead by four motorcycle-riding men. He is a member of progressive partylist Anakpawis.

>> Sergio Atay, 35, in Rizal, Zamboanga del Norte on January 29. He was stopped at a military checkpoint on his way home, went missing and was found dead the following day. He is a member of local farmers group Magbabaul, which is affiliated with the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas or the Peasant Movement of the Philippines.

>> Emel Tejero, 36, and Randel Gallego, 21, whose bodies were discovered in Lianga, Surigao del Sur on January 30. After hauling abaca, they were fired upon by the military, went missing, and were found dead the following day. They are members of Lumad organization Mapasu.

The arrest and imprisonment of Maria Ressa, one of the Philippines’ top journalists and editor of news website Rappler.com, on February 13 was international news. It highlights how the Duterte government is using laws and trumped-up charges to imprison, harass and try to intimidate into silence its critics and those accused of supporting them.

>> Regional Lumad leader Datu Jomorito Goaynon and regional peasant leader Ireneo Udarbe were reported missing on January 28. On the following day, the military announced that it has captured two high-ranking leaders of armed rebel group New People’s Army — who turned out to be Goaynon and Udarbe. They remain imprisoned to date on the basis of planted evidence and trumped-up charges.

>> On January 30, the office of the Misamis Oriental Farmers’ Association was raided by the military. The following were arrested: MOFA chairperson Gerry Basahon, peasant leader Gerald Basahon and staff members Mylene and Marivic Cometa, along with two minors. They continue to be detained on the basis of planted evidence and trumped-up charges.

>> Regional peasant leader Norly Bernabe, who was arrested on February 7 in Taytay, Palawan. Before this, Bernabe had survived an assassination attempt and was forced by the military to present himself as an NPA surrenderee but declined. He is in prison on the basis of trumped-up charges over the killing of a policeman.

>> Jennifer David, 28, a leader of progressive partylist Kabataan’s regional chapter in Central Luzon, was arrested in Sto. Tomas, Pampanga on January 16 and was brought to a police station in Cavite. She was released at the fiscal’s order. It appears that she was mistaken for a namesake who is on the wanted list in a Cavite court.

>> Racquel Quintano, 42, a spokesperson of an organization of relatives of political prisoners, as her husband is detained in Davao City, was abducted on January 16 in Tagum City, Davao del Norte. On the following day, the military admitted that she is in its custody, having surrendered supposedly as a “tax collector” of the NPA. She remains in prison in Compostela Valley.

>> In San Mariano, Isabela, six Kalinga farmers were illegally arrested by the military on January 14, after being strafed. The military accused them of hiding grenades in their baskets and nets. After the immediate response of the community, the farmers were released after two days.

As of December 2018, there were already 225 political prisoners who were arrested under Duterte, bringing the total number of political prisoners in the country to 548.

Ressa’s arrest came hand-in-hand with the cyber-attacks, or the Distributed Denial-of-Service, against progressive news websites Bulatlat.com, PinoyWeekly.org, Kodao.org and Altermidya.org. Websites of progressive organizations Karapatan and Bagong Alyansang Makabayan were also targeted and became inaccessible for weeks.

The Duterte government has also continued to threaten, harass and intimidate activists and other groups critical of it.

>> The military released flyers accusing church workers, lawyers, activists and a journalist in the Northern Mindanao region of being members of the NPA and the Communist Party of the Philippines. Among those included in the flyer are Iglesia Filipina Independiente Bishop Felixberto Calang, Fr. Rolando Abejo of the Movement Against Tyranny-Northern Mindanao, Karapatan-Northern Mindanao spokesperson Fr. Khen Apus, human-rights lawyers Beverly Musni, Czarina Musni, and Beverly Ann Musni, and journalist Cong Corrales and his family.

>> The police filed a case of obstruction of justice, grave threats and coercion against Malayao’s sister, progressive lawyer Edu Balgos and activist Rina Balgos for claiming Malayao’s belongings after he was killed. This was announced in a statement on the eve of Malayao’s burial, on February 6.

>> The following church workers and local church leaders also faced harassment in January-February: Fr. Marco Sulayao of the IFI in Bacolod, Negros Occidental; Rev. Christopher Ablon, Rev. Marciano Carabio, Rev. Jerome Lito, and Rev. Arnold Abuel, all from the IFI, in Metro Manila; Fr. Randy Manicap, Sr. in Pidding, Ilocos Norte.

>> The members of the following activist organizations in Eastern Visayas have also experienced harassment and intimidation: Bayan, People Surge, Anakbayan, and Sinirangan Bisayas.

>> Just after classes resumed on the first week of January, a Philippine National Police memorandum was exposed as ordering the profiling of teachers who are members of progressive partylist ACT Teachers Partylist.

>> Fake news were also circulated on January 7 claiming that an officer of the National Union of Journalists in the Philippines has admitted that the group is a Communist front.

>> Other victims of harassment in this period are: Ralph Justine Baguinon, a student activist and chairperson of the College of Engineering Student Council in University of the Philippines-Diliman, received a death threat. Prof. Phoebe Zoe Maria Sanchez of the UP-Cebu was threatened by the police with the filing of criminal charges. Workers of NutriAsia in Bulacan are being threatened with trumped-up charges in retaliation to their strike.

>> Suspected military men in plain clothes went to the national office of the Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap or Kadamay on January 16 and asked about the whereabouts of the militant urban poor group’s leaders and staff.

>> On February 1, a judge of the Manila Regional Trial Court reduced the names in the Department of Justice’s terrorist list from more than 600 to two. A threat still hangs over the heads of the more than 600 activists because Malayao was included in the list, was included among those removed, and was still assassinated.

The Duterte government seems intent on intensifying repression and human-rights violations. It is pushing for the lowering of the age of criminal responsibility from 12 to nine. It is using the January bombings in Jolo, Sulu to try to justify the continued imposition of Martial Law in Mindanao. It is proposing more draconian amendments to the country’s anti-terrorism law.

In February, it undertook a black propaganda drive in Europe in which it demonized progressive organizations and institutions in the Philippines as Communist fronts, in order to attempt to deodorize its stinking human-rights record. It continues to appoint retired police and military generals to positions in the civilian bureaucracy. It continues to revive age-old cases against NDFP peace consultants including Vicente Ladlad, who is now a political detainee. It has asked a UN working group on enforced disappearances to remove 625 cases within the period 1975-2012 in order to whitewash these cases.

Despite all this, condemnation and protests against the human rights violations are continuing. One of the results of collective and legal action as well as popular outcry was the release of Rafael Baylosis, another NDFP peace consultant, from detention on January 15. The judge on the case clearly said that the evidence used against him were planted.

Here are some recent articles that provide context to the Duterte government’s wanton violations of human rights.

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The data presented in this roundup comes from Karapatan, an alliance of individuals, groups and organizations working for the promotion and protection of human rights in the Philippines. Collated and contributed by ICHRP-Africa

Tribunal Declares Trump and Duterte Guilty of Crimes Against Humanity

BY Marjorie Cohn

Source: https://truthout.org/articles/tribunal-declares-trump-and-duterte-guilty-of-crimes-against-humanity/

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and his government committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, aided and abetted by U.S. President Donald Trump and his administration, according to a recent ruling from the International Peoples’ Tribunal on the Philippines.

The tribunal, which was held in Brussels, Belgium, on September 18 and 19, 2018, rendered its 84-page decision on these crimes on March 8. Conveners of the tribunal included the International Association of Democratic Lawyers, European Association of Lawyers for Democracy and World Human Rights, Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers, IBON International, and the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines. A panel of eight jurors from Egypt, France, Italy, Malaysia, the Netherlands and the United States heard testimony from 31 witnesses, including me.

These jurors ordered the defendants to make reparations; to provide compensation or indemnification, restitution and rehabilitation; and to be subjected to possible prosecution and sanctions for their crimes. Although the tribunal does not have the power to enforce those measures, its findings of facts and conclusions of law could be used to bolster the preliminary examination of crimes by the Duterte regime currently pending in the International Criminal Court (ICC).

“The Tribunal has finally rendered its historical and comprehensive decision,” Edre Olalia, president of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL) in the Philippines, who also served as clerk of the tribunal, told Truthout in an email. “It is extensive in its presentation of the facts and evidence” and contains “an incisive elaboration of the nexus between the acts and omissions of Defendants and their accountability under a plethora of international instruments.”

Olalia added that the decision “sends out a message loud and clear: a people continually victimized by authoritarian and repressive governments and exploitative entities will seek justice wherever they can before those who are willing to give them a fighting chance.” Finally, Olalia said, “the decision remains ever more relevant to this day and time when the Filipinos are still struggling to ride out the storm of tyranny, brutality, corruption, misogyny and repression.”

Much of this tyranny, brutality and corruption has been endorsed, whether implicitly or explicitly, by the United States. The unholy alliance between the Philippine and U.S. governments is long-standing. For the past 18 years, under Presidents Bush, Obama and Trump, the United States has continued to provide assistance to the Philippine government, which enables it to commit war crimes and crimes against humanity against its own people and deny them their legal right to self-determination.

After the 9/11 attacks, Bush declared the Philippines a second front in the war on terror, calling it “Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines.” The Philippine government used Bush’s campaign as an opportunity to escalate its vicious counterinsurgency program against Muslims and individuals and organizations that oppose its policies.

The Philippine government labels specific people and groups as “terrorists,” which makes them targets of the regime. The government also engages in “red tagging” — political vilification. These labels can lead to harassment, assault, detention, torture and even murder. Targets are frequently human rights activists and advocates, political opponents, community organizers or groups struggling for national liberation.

Indeed, attorney Benjamin Ramos, secretary general of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers, was assassinated on November 6, 2018, two months after the tribunal proceedings. “Atty. Ramos was a leading human rights lawyer in Negros, who passionately advocated for genuine agrarian reform and peasant rights,” the NUPL said in a statement. Ramos was the 34th lawyer killed by the Duterte regime. Two more have been killed since.

The tribunal found Defendants Rodrigo Duterte and his regime, and Donald Trump and his administration guilty of gross and systematic violations of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights; and the rights of the people to national self-determination and development.

Duterte is responsible for the crimes of his administration under the doctrine of Command Responsibility. Commanders are criminally liable for murders and other crimes committed by their subordinates if they knew or should have known they would be committed and they did nothing to stop or prevent it.

Liability for the Trump administration was based on its role as accomplice to Duterte’s crimes. The Rome Statute of the ICC includes aiding and abetting liability for war crimes. An individual can be convicted of a war crime in the ICC if he or she “aids, abets or otherwise assists” in the commission or attempted commission of the crime. This includes “providing the means for its commission.” The U.S. government supplied the Duterte regime with $175 million in foreign military financing in 2017 and 2018, and $111 million in 2019.

Violations of Civil and Political Rights

The tribunal found the Duterte regime responsible for “mass murder, gross violations of the right to due process, unabated killings, attacks, terrorist-tagging and criminalisation of human rights defenders and political dissenters, muzzling of the right to free expression, impunity to the hilt, general situation of unpeace, and the utter contempt for human rights.”

Duterte is perpetrating a ruthless “war on drugs,” which has taken the form of a violent war on suspected drug users. Most victims of the drug war are poor people from the slums. A police memo ordered that suspected drug users be “neutralized” or killed. The government admits to killing at least 4,410 people suspected of drug use as of July 31, 2018. Independent sources put the number at 23,000. The police claim that they acted in self-defense.

But, tribunal prosecutor Neri Colmenares, the chairperson of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers, argued, “direct evidence including eyewitness’s accounts, CCTV and others show that the police, themselves, killed the victims [who were] not fighting back. They have been killing the victims while the victims were kneeling and pleading for their lives.”

Colmenares noted the brazenness of these killings, saying, “They were committed in broad daylight, in public places, in front of many witnesses … even near police stations showing that the perpetrators were never afraid at all at being accosted by the authorities.”

There is a culture of impunity for officials in the Philippines. Police officers who carry out illegal killings are not brought to justice. They are promoted to higher posts.

Many lawyers are afraid to defend drug suspects for fear they might be killed. Since Duterte took office on July 1, 2016, the regime has illegally killed 10 prosecutors, 21 lawyers, three judges, and 13 journalists.

“The extra-judicial killings have also intensified against human rights defenders and the progressive sections of Philippine civil society who have criticized the current undemocratic and anti-people policies and systems,” the tribunal wrote. “As of June 2018, 169 leaders of the progressive movement have been victims of extrajudicial-killings (EJKs) and an additional 509 political prisoners are illegally jailed, subjected to trumped-up criminal charges and planted evidence.”

Duterte is unapologetic. On September 27, 2018, he publicly admitted, “My only sin is the extrajudicial killings.” Extrajudicial means outside the law.

Fatou Bensouda, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court wrote in an October 2016 statement about the situation in the Philippines that extra-judicial killings may fall under the jurisdiction of the ICC “if they are committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population pursuant to a State policy to commit such an attack.” That is the definition of a crime against humanity.

Witnesses testified at the tribunal that suspects and prisoners endure physical and psychological torture. Janry Mensis, a miner in Mindanao, testified via video. He described how he and his brother were arrested, detained and tortured. They were tied and detained inside an ambulance for nine days. Then they were hogtied and their mouths covered with packing tape. The soldiers then strangled them. When the brothers pretended to be unconscious, they were thrown into a pit with wood and oil and set afire. They dragged themselves out of the pit after the soldiers left them for dead. They both suffered third-degree burns and other injuries from the torture.

Duterte declared Martial Law in Mindanao on May 23, 2017, purportedly in response to an invasion in one city by an alleged ISIS-inspired group (ISIS is also known as Daesh). His government has used the Martial Law to conduct illegal arrests and detentions, enforced disappearances, forced displacement and arbitrary deprivation of property, destruction of mosques and schools, and arbitrary denial of humanitarian aid to civilians caught in the crossfire.

After considering this evidence, the tribunal found violations of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; Universal Declaration of Human Rights; Geneva Conventions; Nuremberg Tribunal; International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination; Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment; and UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders.

Murder, torture and cruel treatment constitute war crimes under the Rome Statute and the Geneva Conventions.

Murder or torture committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack, constitute crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute.

Violations of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

The Philippine and U.S. governments were not the only entities on trial at the tribunal. Other defendants included the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, the World Trade Organization (WTO), and transnational corporations and foreign banks doing business in the Philippines.

“Duterte’s economic policies result in the deprivation of genuine government service as they divert public funds to corruption and big ticket projects demanded by Defendants World Bank, IMF, WTO and transnational corporations,” the tribunal wrote.

The tribunal determined that Duterte “has perpetrated anti-democratic and exclusionary economics and governance as he dramatically perpetuates neoliberal policies imposed or influenced by Defendant actors and transnational entities doing business in the Philippines by the systematic violation of fundamental human rights as exemplified in the mining exploitation.” Moreover, the tribunal concluded, “This aggravates even more systemic violations of the people’s social, economic and cultural rights.”

Witnesses testified to “the impact of an exploitative system that has deprived millions of Filipinos of their livelihood, demolished the shanties of the marginalized poor, grabbed lands of the peasants and condemned workers to eternal poverty through perpetual contractualization and the exportation of labor, many of whom are victimized abroad,” Colmenares summarized.

The evidence revealed the imposition of “an exploitative system which has reduced the Philippines into a producer of raw material for industries; reduced the Philippines into a mere source of cheap labor and a lucrative and pliant market for their goods.” This is called neoliberalism.

The tribunal concluded that the Duterte regime “has consistently failed to provide the basic rights to work; to living wages and regular employment; to land; to an adequate standard of living; and to health, housing and education.” The tribunal also faulted the regime for imposing “new taxes that hit primarily the poor; and forced displacement of poor families to install tourism projects on their lands.”

“Farmers are deprived of the lands they have tilled for ages and are attacked; workers are exploited and their strikes violently dispersed; the urban poor remain homeless and threatened when they assert their rights; education is commercialized and inaccessible to the great majority,” the tribunal noted. In addition, “thousands are forced to migrate daily, including nurses, under a labor export policy; the right to livelihood is curtailed; and distressed overseas workers are neglected and abandoned.”

The tribunal found violations of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; Universal Declaration of Human Rights; Convention Concerning Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize; Convention on the Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively; Algiers Declaration; Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women; and International Convention on Protections of Rights of All Migrant Workers and their Families.

Violations of the Rights to National Self-Determination and Development

“Duterte has essentially demonstrated his allegiance to US imperialist goals in Asia-Pacific region,” the tribunal concluded. His government “also overturned anew the victory of the people in removing US military bases.”

The tribunal explained how the U.S. bases in the Philippines facilitate Duterte’s counterinsurgency program: “US presence and the permanent and expanded basing of US troops are further emboldening the Defendant Duterte government in implementing the counterinsurgency program Oplan Kapayapaan patterned after the 2009 US Counterinsurgency Guide and financed by Defendant US government.”

U.S. government assistance to the Duterte government includes the provision of “intelligence, funding, orientation, training and arms to promote and pursue its economic and geopolitical interests in the region.”

The tribunal adopted my testimony as follows: “US military aid to the Philippine government facilitates its commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity against its own people. Like Philippine leaders, US political and military leaders could be liable in the International Criminal Court as aiders and abettors of war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The Filipino people have the right to self-determination, which includes the right to development. As stated in the Declaration on the Right to Development, it is “by virtue of” self-determination that peoples “have the right freely to determine their political status and to pursue their economic, social and cultural development.” The people have the “inalienable right to full sovereignty over all their national wealth and resources.”

Witnesses documented widespread and systematic attacks on indigenous peoples and national minorities, and the use of white phosphorous gas and enforced disappearances, which amount to crimes against humanity.

“Philippine and US political and military leaders do not enjoy impunity for their crimes. Achieving justice for the Filipino people is not just a matter for people in the Philippines. Americans and other people throughout the world have a responsibility to bring the criminals to justice,” the tribunal wrote, adopting my testimony. “The Filipino people continue their valiant struggle for national liberation and self-determination. Providing legal accountability for the crimes of Philippine and US officials will help to deter them from committing additional crimes.”

In February 2018, Bensouda opened a preliminary examination into possible crimes committed since at least 1 July, 2016, in the context of the “war on drugs” campaign launched by the Philippine government. A preliminary examination is an initial step to determine whether there is a reasonable basis to proceed with a full investigation.

The following month, in March 2018, the Philippine government submitted a withdrawal from the Rome Statute. It takes effect one year later. Bensouda responded, “A withdrawal has no impact on on-going proceedings or any matter which was already under consideration by the Court prior to the date on which the withdrawal became effective.”

Even if the ICC does not ultimately investigate and prosecute war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by military and police officials of the Philippine government, other countries could bring the offenders to justice under the well-established principle of universal jurisdiction.

Any country can try a foreign national for war crimes and crimes against humanity when the suspect’s home country is unable or unwilling to prosecute, and Duterte has proved unwilling to prosecute those responsible for the heinous crimes against the Filipino people.

Copyright © Truthout. Reprinted with permission

Marjorie Cohn is professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, former president of the National Lawyers Guild, deputy secretary general of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers and a member of the advisory board of Veterans for Peace. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues.

Free Maoj! Free all Political Prisoners in the Philippines

February 22, 2019

Atty. Menardo Guevarra

Secretary, Department of Justice

Padre Faura St., Manila

Email: communications@doj.gov.ph

Dear Secretary Guevarra,

Philippines Australia Union Link has been working since 1984 to strengthen the solidarity between the union movements of our two countries.

We utterly condemn the Duterte government for the operation in which Maoj Maga was detained on February 22, 2018. Maoj is an organiser of the Kilusang Mayo Uno Labor Center. He was accosted on a basketball court by at least a dozen men, blindfolded and forced into a vehicle without knowing why or where he was being taken. At the police headquarters, he was subjected to hours of interrogation and not given the chance to contact his lawyers and family. The arresting officers added to the outrage with the absurd charge or a murder in far away Mindanao, and planted a .45 caliber pistol on him. Maoj was put through misery in several congested prisons as well as a quarantine-isolation cell.

On this first anniversary of his unlawful detention, we call for his immediate release from the Metro Manila District Jail-Annex 4 in Camp Bagong Diwa, Bicutan, Taguig City, along with the release of the other thirty-five political prisoners there.

In fact, we call loudly for the release of all detained trade unionists in the Philippines and all 500 plus political prisoners held in jails across the country, an end to the repression and for genuine peace negotiations to resolve the deep crisis in Philippines society.

In solidarity,

 

Peter Murphy

Secretary

 

Cc Hon Chito Gascon, Commission on Human Rights; Senator Marise Payne, Minister for Foreign Affairs; Senator Penny Wong; Senator Richard Di Natale; Ms Michelle Bachelet OHCHR; KMU; Karapatan

 

 

3 farmers killed, 6 illegally arrested as 2019 rolls out – Karapatan

Press Release

January 17, 2019

Reference: Cristina Palabay, Secretary General, +639173162831      

Karapatan Public Information Desk, +63918-9790580

Reposted from:
3 farmers killed, 6 illegally arrested as 2019 rolls out – Karapatan

There is no respite from the killings and illegal arrests. It seems that this government and its salaried mercenaries remain in a killing frenzy, targeting the poor in its twisted and militarist campaigns. As the year rolls out, the Duterte regime continues its grim legacy of outright disregard and scorn for human rights. We are set to face more challenging times ahead, as the country is plunged further down Duterte’s psychotic, cruel, and spiteful leadership,” said Karapatan secretary general Cristina Palabay, citing the cases of 3 extrajudicial killings and 6 victims of illegal arrests in January’s first two weeks.

On the evening of January 8, 2019, a 39-year-old farmer was gunned down in Brgy. Mabunga, San Francisco, Quezon. Albert Espenas was manning his store when assailants shot him, after the latter feigned to buy goods at the victim’s store. The killing of Espenas was used by the 85th Infantry Battalion to justify their militarization in San Francisco, Quezon. As of this writing, soldiers remain encamped in the area.

Three days later, on January 11, 2019, two separate incidents of killing occured in Guihulngan City, Negros Oriental and Sorsogon, Bicol. In Brgy. Bulado, Guihulngan, Remeglo Arquillos, a habalhabal driver was flagged down by armed men while he was transporting two passengers to their destinations. According to the two witnesses, Arquillos was ordered to dismount from his motorcycle, after which he was shot four times. The assailants fled immediately.

Meanwhile in Bicol, a member of Anakpawis was also shot dead by four motorcycle-riding gunmen while standing near the village hall in Brgy. Bato, Bacon, Sorsogon. The victim, Nicasio Ebio, was 37 years old and an active member of Anakpawis.

The victims are poor Filipinos who continue to bear the brunt of Duterte’s fascism. As Duterte continues to spout venomous speeches that stir controversy, this government’s foot soldiers and security forces are continuously training its guns on farmers, fisherfolk, and indigenous peoples. The year 2019 will yield more cases of rights violations as the Duterte regime treads down the path of tyranny. The sites of these killings are where soldiers are littered, and in the past year, these places been among the regions where violations continue incessantly,” added Palabay. She noted that as of 2018, there have been 23 political killings in Bicol and 27 in Western Visayas.

In a separate incident on January 14, 2019, six Kalinga farmers in San Mariano, Isabela were illegally arrested by elements of the 17th IBPA. The victims were identified as Espido Tamang, Jojo Tamang, Rodel Infiel, Arjay Zipagan, Tuting Ampa, and Porong Ampa. According to witnesses and Robert Turino, Brgy. Captain of Brgy. Paminan, the victims were strafed, illegally arrested, and brought to the military camp in Rogus, Cauyan City. The military alleged that the farmers were hiding grenades in their nets and baskets; this was vehemently disputed by the community. Due to the immediate and coordinated response of local officials, human rights organizations, and members of the community, the victims were eventually released from the military’s camp on the afternoon of January 16, 2019.

The release of the six farmers prove that much can be gained from collective assertion. Despite the posturing of the military and the viciousness of State fascism, it is the Filipino people who can change the course of this nation steeped in systemic poverty, corruption and rights abuses. If the Duterte regime and its minions are steering the country to deeper crisis, it is the determined action of Filipinos who can drive it towards the direction of genuine change, towards a just and humane society,” concluded Palabay.
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PUBLIC INFORMATION DESK
publicinfo@karapatan.org 
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Alliance for the Advancement of People’s Rights2nd Flr. Erythrina Bldg., #1 Maaralin corner Matatag Sts., Central DistrictDiliman, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES 1101Telefax: (+63 2) 4354146Web: http://www.karapatan.org


KARAPATAN is an alliance of human rights organizations and programs, human rights desks and committees of people’s organizations, and individual advocates committed to the defense and promotion of people’s rights and civil liberties.  It monitors and documents cases of human rights violations, assists and defends victims and conducts education, training and campaign.