1. Introduction
Over recent years reports of an increased number
of killings of political activists, predominately those associated with leftist or left-orientated groups,(1) have caused
increasing concern in the Philippines(2) and internationally.(3)
The attacks, mostly carried out by unidentified
men who shoot the victims before escaping on motorcycles, have very rarely led to the arrest, prosecution and punishment of
those responsible. Amnesty International believes that the killings constitute a pattern and that a continuing failure to
deliver justice to the victims represents a failure by the Government of the Philippines
to fulfil its obligation to protect the right to life of every individual in its jurisdiction.
The organisation is also concerned that the
killings have played a major role in the break-down of a protracted peace process and an accompanying human rights agreement,
between the government and the National Democratic Front (NDF), representing the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)
and its armed wing, the New People’s Army (NPA).
The common features in the methodology of the
attacks, leftist profile of the victims, and an apparent culture of impunity(4) shielding the perpetrators, has led Amnesty
International to believe that the killings are not an unconnected series of criminal murders, armed robberies or other unlawful
killings. Rather they constitute a pattern of politically targeted extrajudicial executions(5) taking place within the broader
context of a continuing counter-insurgency campaign. The organisation remains gravely concerned at repeated credible reports
that members of the security forces have been directly involved in the attacks, or else have tolerated, acquiesced to, or
been complicit in them.
Government and military officials insist that
there is no state policy which calls or allows for extrajudicial executions, that there are no secret "death squads" and no
use by members of the armed forces of hired killers. They claim that most of the killings were in fact carried out by members
of the armed groups themselves in the context of factional rivalries or internal "purges". The Government of the Philippines
points to the comprehensive array of international human rights treaties which the Philippines has ratified and asserts that
in addition provisions protecting human rights are enshrined in the Constitution and ensured through national laws and institutions,
including both an independent judiciary and a Commission on Human Rights.
The international human rights treaties signed
by the Philippines impose a clear duty on states to investigate alleged violations of the right to life, including political
killings "promptly, thoroughly and effectively through independent and impartial bodies".(6) Yet the fact that the overwhelming
majority of attacks remain unresolved illuminates a continuing failure by the authorities to act with due diligence in investigating
and prosecuting such violations. This failure continues to have a serious, corrosive impact on public confidence in the administration
of justice and the rule of law. The chairperson of the Philippine Commission on Human Rights noted that a pattern of impunity
in relation to the killings is visible, and the government has a responsibility to protect the right to life, whatever the
political or other background of the victims.(7)
Amnesty International believes that urgent steps
are needed to remedy this situation, not least because the threat of further killings has intensified due to political developments
during 2006. These include President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s declaration of a week-long State of Emergency in late February and the continuing collapse of the peace process. Prospect for
revival of peace negotiations dwindled further amid intensification of counter-insurgency operations, the direct transfer
of names and addresses of NDF negotiators and others listed in a former safe-conduct agreement to an arrest warrant, and an
announcement in June of the release of substantial additional funds to allow the armed forces to "crush" the communist insurgency
in certain areas within two years.(8)
During and after the Emergency, justified as
a response to an alleged coup conspiracy involving an array of actors from the extreme left to the extreme right of the political
spectrum, senior officials repeatedly claimed that the major threat to national security came from the CPP-NPA. They publicly
linked the legal leftist political opposition directly with communist armed groups, in effect implying that there was no distinction
between them. Such public labelling, in conjunction with the arrest and attempted arrest of leftist Congressional Representatives
on charges of "rebellion", raised concerns that the risk of further killings of leftist activists was intensifying.(9)
Such concerns proved well-founded. As senior
officials and military officers labelled members of the legal left "enemies of the state",(10) and failed to condemn the killings
consistently at all levels of government, fears grew that elements within the armed forces might interpret this as a tacit
signal that political killings were a legitimate part of the anti-insurgency campaign. At least 51 political killings took
place in the first half of 2006, compared to the 66 killings recorded by Amnesty International in the whole of 2005.(11)
While welcoming President Arroyo’s condemnation
of political killings in her State of the Nation Address to Congress in July 2006,(12) her earlier reported instructions to
cabinet officials to put an end to further killings,(13) and the establishment of a special police investigative task force,(14)
Amnesty International believes further determined steps are essential. The organization calls on the Government of the Philippines to implement Amnesty International’s
14-Point Program for the Prevention of Extrajudicial Executions.(15)
As an integral part of this Program, the authorities
should urgently reiterate a clear, unequivocal message to all members of the police, military and other security forces that
involvement in, or acquiescence to, such unlawful killings will never be tolerated. All such cases must be fully and promptly
investigated and all those responsible, whether linked to the armed forces or not, brought to justice. Only in this manner
can public confidence in the impartial and effective administration of justice be restored and a peace process, with respect
for human rights by all sides at its heart, be revived.
2. Historical background
2.1 Armed conflict and human rights
Armed conflict between government forces and
communist insurgents, primarily the CPP-NPA, has continued for over 37 years in the Philippines. Despite democratic reforms and the introduction of legal and institutional
human rights safeguards following the ouster of former President Ferdinand Marcos(16) in 1986, and a series of attempts during
succeeding presidencies to move forward a peace process, fighting has persisted. Root causes sustaining the conflict include
widespread poverty and economic inequity, poor governance including weaknesses in the administration of justice, violations
of human rights and impunity.(17)
Within this context, the CPP-NPA as leaders
of a nationwide "Maoist revolutionary movement" have pursued a strategy of "protracted people’s war" combining continuing
tactical military offensives by rural guerrilla units, with building a mass political and organizational support base. In
response, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and Philippine National Police (PNP) have conducted a series of anti-insurgency
operations nationwide. The conflict has been marked by human rights abuses on both sides. From the late 1980s, the AFP pursued
a "Total Approach" counter-insurgency strategy, including the increased use of official militias and a toleration of unofficial
‘vigilante’ groups to "hold and consolidate" CPP-NPA-influenced areas following military clearance operations
by regular AFP troops.(18) Implicit in the strategy was the aim of eroding the insurgency’s popular mass base by moving
against members of legal organizations suspected of being "front-groups" for the CPP-NPA. Accordingly, the practice of "red-labelling",
by which perceived communist or leftist opponents of the government were tagged as ‘subversives’ became more pronounced.
Once publicly labelled, such people were at sharply increased risk of grave human rights violations, including extrajudicial
executions, "disappearances", arbitrary arrest and torture.(19)
Meanwhile the CPP-NPA(20) adopted a more hard-line
strategy, combining coordinated rural insurgency with assassinations of military, police and local officials in urban areas.
During a series of internal "purges" in the late 1980s, the NPA were also responsible for numerous abductions, summary execution
and torture of individuals suspected of being government "deep penetration agents" within their own ranks.(21) Extortion demands
justified as "revolutionary tax" and harassment or attacks on civilians who resisted payment were also commonplace.(22)
In 1992, the then newly-elected government of
President Fidel Ramos announced a policy of national reconciliation, and moved to revive the peace process with the NDF. The
Anti-Subversion Act, which made membership of the CPP illegal, was repealed.(23) As intermittent negotiations with the NDF
continued, the CPP-NPA was significantly weakened by leadership splits and a marked decline in the number of active armed
fighters.
As the scale and intensity of armed conflict
diminished, the numbers of reported human right abuses also declined. However despite this national trend, fluctuating but
persistent reports of "disappearances", torture and extrajudicial executions, often occurring within ‘militarized zones’,(24)
reinforced Amnesty International’s concerns about the continuing climate of impunity and its conclusion that existing
human rights safeguards were not, in practice, robust enough to withstand immediate political or military pressures. In addition,
reports of abuses by the CPP-NPA also continued including the killing of civilians in the context of demands for "revolutionary
tax" and as acts of "revolutionary justice".
2.2 The peace process: a human rights agreement and monitoring mechanism
During the 1990s a series of formal and informal
negotiations between the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the National Democratic Front (NDF)(25) led
to agreements on the principles and framework for advancing a peace process.(26) In an important step forward in 1998, as
the first of a four stage agenda, both sides concluded and signed a Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and
International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL).(27)
Through the Agreement, both sides affirmed that
they would respect and apply fundamental principles and standards enshrined within international human rights law, including
the right to life, the right to due process of law and the right to freedom of thought and political beliefs, and within international
humanitarian law, including protection and humane treatment of civilians and combatants not participating directly in the
conflict, and the prohibition on the use of child solders.
In the absence of a ceasefire agreement, the
CARHRIHL was seen as a key instrument not only to address continuing patterns of abuses occurring within the context of the
continuing conflict, but as a measure to build trust and confidence and so strengthen the momentum of the peace process. To
this end and to ensure compliance by both sides, the CARHRIHL established a complaints monitoring procedure by which allegations
of violations of the Agreement, after screening by separate GRP and NDF Monitoring Committees, could be assessed and verified
by a Joint Monitoring Committee. This Committee would then refer its conclusions, reached by consensus, to the relevant principals
for comments, investigation and appropriate remedial action.
However over succeeding years the potential
of the CARHRIHL to address and reduce abuses and so help invigorate the peace process remained unrealized. The continuity
of formal peace negotiations proved vulnerable. The listing of the CPP-NPA as a foreign "Terrorist Organisation" by the US
and EU and other allies in 2002 proved a major political impediment to continued negotiations and to the parallel implementation
of the CARHRIHL.(28) Other destabilising factors included the reported assassination of a number of local electoral candidates
by the NPA in 2001 and, increasingly, the series of unresolved political killings of members of legal leftist parties by unidentified
armed men. As a result, with formal talks suspended intermittently, the official inauguration of the CARHRIHL’s Joint
Monitoring Committee was delayed until 2004.
During this period the political killings were
seen as linked to significant electoral developments which were also impacting on GRP - NDF relations. In 2001, groups within
the broad spectrum of the ‘militant’ left began formal participation in constitutional democratic processes by
standing in Congressional elections as "progressive" parties under the party-list system.(29) In the elections, a leftist
party, Bayan Muna (People First) topped the national list to get the maximum three seats allowed to an individual party-list
group. In the 2004 elections the "progressive" bloc doubled its party list seats to six with the election of representatives
from Anakpawis (Toiling Masses) and Gabriela, a women’s party.
However hopes that the left’s participation
in democratic politics, the 2004 inauguration of the Joint Monitoring Committee, and the reaffirmation of the 1995 safe-conduct
pact (the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees)(30) would help reduce tensions proved unfounded. Formal negotiations
failed to make substantive progress and the peace process faltered. While the separate GRP and NDF monitoring committees continued
to receive and screen complaints of abuses,(31) they did not meet together as the Joint Monitoring Committee, and so were
unable to promote and facilitate an appropriate course of effective remedial action by either the GRP or the CPP-NPA. Concerns
over failures to address such complaints, particularly in relation to the rising number of political killings of leftist activists
by allegedly military-linked gunmen but including periodic killings of civilians reportedly carried out by the NPA,(32) increased
as the impasse in the peace process deepened.
The situation deteriorated further as disputes
over the validity of President Arroyo’s electoral victory in June 2004 sparked intense political controversy. In August,
citing a loss of confidence in the legitimacy and durability of the Arroyo administration, the NDF announced that it was withdrawing
for the time being from formal negotiations. In response the government made clear its position that it did not consider it
possible to operationalize the Joint Monitoring Committee and so effectively monitor implementation of the CARHRIHL unless
peace negotiations were conducted at the same time. Subsequently the government suspended the Joint Agreement on Safety and
Immunity Guarantees.
3. State of Emergency, arbitrary detentions,
and targeting of the Left
In late February 2006 President Arroyo declared
a State of Emergency(33) citing a conspiracy to overthrow the government by members of the mainstream opposition in "tactical
alliance" with rightists, communist rebels, progressive leftist groups and serving and former military personnel.(34)
Under the powers stemming from the State of
Emergency, the President ordered the armed forces to "prevent and suppress all forms of lawless violence".(35) Police enforced
a ban on public assemblies and, following a raid on a newspaper office, police threatened media outlets who failed to respect
guidelines related to "responsible" reporting that they faced being shut down.(36)
The authorities arrested or threatened to arrest
scores of suspects from across the political spectrum accused of "rebellion" or involvement in the reported coup conspiracy.(37)
At least 25 AFP members were detained by the military authorities on suspicion of having planned to attempt to force President
Arroyo’s resignation by publicly announcing a "withdrawal" of support from the President during expected mass public
demonstrations. Other officers were accused of having conspired with the CPP-NPA members to cooperate in the alleged coup
attempt.
However, the primary target of government action
appeared to be the CPP-NPA and the progressive leftist parties, which were now explicitly accused by senior government officials
of being front organizations for illegal communist armed groups.(38) On 28 February 2006 police lodged a "rebellion" complaint
with prosecutors against some 50 prominent figures from across the spectrum of the left, including NDF-CPP leaders in exile,
leaders of the leftist party-list groups and others.(39)
In a serious blow to prospects for reviving
confidence in the peace process, the list of those accused of rebellion was substantially comprised of persons previously
listed in the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees, and the address of most of the suspects was cited as the
Secretariat of the Joint Monitoring Committee of the CARHRIHL.(40)
Over subsequent months it appeared increasingly
clear that the authorities had decided to abandon the series of peace negotiations conducted previously with the NDF.(41)
Rebellion charges were pursued against prominent leftists formerly granted safe conduct to participate in negotiations and
the view, long held by some military and government officials, that membership of the CPP was tantamount to being a "co-conspirator"
with the NPA and therefore a criminal act, appeared to gain renewed strength.(42) In May, Major General Jovito Palparan, describing
the 1992 repeal of the Anti-Subversion Act as a mistake, called for the re-introduction of legislation that would criminalize
membership of the CPP and sympathetic organizations.(43) In June, President Arroyo and other government officials publicly
reiterated a policy of "all-out war" to "crush" the CPP-NPA within ten years,(44) and an opposition Senator who visited the
exiled NDF leadership in the Netherlands to explore way of reviving the peace process was accused of "treason".(45)
Political commentators expressed concern that
the government risked instigating an "anti-communist witch-hunt", and that the policy of intensified military counter-insurgency
operations was less a legitimate response to an immediate, pressing national security threat posed by the CPP-NPA, than an
attempt for political reasons to consolidate support within elements of the military and to counter the potential for future
electoral success on the part of leftist party-list groups.(46) In addition, at the same time as orders went out to escalate
military counter-insurgency operations, renewed official assertions that the continuing killings of leftist activists were
in fact the result of internal communist "purges"(47) increased fears that police investigations into the killings were less
likely to be sufficiently prompt, determined or thorough, and that there was an increased risk that those responsible for
the killings would believe that they had received a signal of official acquiescence for these abuses.
Amnesty International is gravely concerned that
the patterns of political killings, "disappearances" and other human rights violations that contributed to the undermining
of the peace process over recent years will now worsen. In July, to counter government anti-insurgency operations the leadership
of the CPP-NPA called for an intensification of guerrilla warfare, including tactical and punitive operations, with the creation
of special units to attack and exact "revolutionary justice" on the "masterminds and operatives" believed responsible for
the political killings.(48)
With the political will necessary to revive
peace negotiations currently appearing absent, the organization believes it essential that all sides urgently reassert respect
for human rights in order to prevent the serious threat of a renewed spiral of human rights abuses.
3.1 Arbitrary detentions and the threat of politically motivated charges
Events during and since the State of Emergency have also raised concerns over political motivations behind
reportedly selective arrests and launch of criminal proceedings, particularly against leftist suspects. The nature of the
charges and the manner in which they have been brought forward have intensified continuing concerns that these arrests constituted
arbitrary detentions based on a deliberate invocation of unfounded allegations, and signalled an erosion of the right of suspects
to due process and a fair trial.
The arrest and detention of Anakpawis Congressman
Crispin Beltran highlighted these concerns. He was reportedly surrounded by armed police on 25 February 2006 as he left his
home outside Manila, he was "invited for questioning" and brought to PNP headquarters at Camp Crame in the
capital. He was later informed that he was being held in connection with a 1985 warrant of arrest issued 21 years earlier
under then President Ferdinand Marcos, for alleged "rebellion".(49) His lawyers challenged the validity of this warrant, asserting
that it had been legally quashed in 1988. A second charge was then brought forward accusing him of "incitement to sedition"(50)
for statements he allegedly made at an earlier mass "people’s power" rally attended by a range of prominent politicians
in which calls were made for President Arroyo’s resignation and ouster.(51) Crispin Beltran asserted that he had not
in fact spoken publicly at the rally, that there was video evidence to prove this, and that even if he had spoken at such
an event Congressional immunity would apply in relation to such a charge.(52) Subsequently, his continued detention was justified
by reported police investigations into a further rebellion charge related to the recent alleged coup conspiracy with right
wing elements to overthrow President Arroyo.
The police also sought to arrest on suspicion
of "rebellion" five other leftist Congress Representatives, including Satur Ocampo, Teodoro Casino and Joel Virador of Bayan
Muna, Liza Maza of Gabriela and Rafael Mariano of Anakpawis. The five appealed to the House of Representatives
to grant them "protective custody" as members of the legislature and so shield them from immediate arrest without a court
warrant. This request was granted while they remained within the Congressional compound. The five agreed to participate in
preliminary investigation proceedings – standard for the investigation of alleged offences excepting those, including
rebellion, which allow for arrests without warrants. Such proceedings led to a ruling by Department of Justice public prosecutors
as to whether there is a basis for charges to be referred to a court where a decision would be made as to whether or not there
is sufficient evidence to issue an arrest warrant.(53)
The five Representatives remained within the
Congressional compound for over two months. Preliminary investigation proceedings continued until May, when a court ruled
on a technicality that the existing charges should be dismissed. However soon afterwards the Department of Justice filed further
rebellion charges against the five Representatives and 49 other suspects and therefore all remain under continuing threat
of arrest.
Amnesty International remains concerned that
during and since the State of Emergency, the arrest or threatened arrest of scores of mainly
leftist suspects have exposed weaknesses in Philippines
laws and procedures safeguarding against arbitrary arrest and detention.
The general rule under Philippine law that a
person should be detained by police only after a court has assessed the basis of the alleged offence and issued a warrant
of arrest, can be circumvented by provisions allowing for police to conduct an arrest without court warrant. These include
when a crime is being committed in the presence of a police officer, or has just been committed,(54) and in the case of charges
of rebellion.
Amnesty International has documented numerous
cases where police have deliberately misused arrest without warrant provisions, not least to avoid the scrutiny of the courts
at a time when police investigations will only begin in earnest when the suspect is held in custody and can be interrogated.(55)
In addition, the organization has expressed alarm that the subsequent summary Inquest Procedures(56) in place to safeguard
the rights of those arrested without a warrant, often fail to maintain sufficient impartiality in assessing the lawfulness
of the arrest and whether charges should be filed, and are ineffective in protecting detainees from torture and ill-treatment
by police during protracted periods of custodial investigation.
In this context, the organization has particular
concerns about the recent marked increase in the application of the charge of rebellion, designated a "continuing crime" in
Philippine jurisprudence.(57) This designation allows for a police officer to arrest a suspect without a court warrant, in
the same manner as officer is empowered to conduct warrantless arrest when, for example, a robbery or theft is in progress
within his or her sight. A person suspected by police of rebellion, which may allegedly have happened years before, can be
arrested at any time - without a court first assessing whether a prima facie case exists. Amnesty International is
concerned that, in light of the government’s current political and military efforts against the CPP-NPA and its alleged
supporters among legal leftist parties, such rebellion charges are open to misuse as a pretext to affect politically-motivated
detentions.
The suspect, arrested without a warrant and
subjected to summary inquest proceedings that may not be sufficiently impartial, faces the prospect of being subjected to
a prolonged deprivation of liberty before the basis of allegations put forward by the police can be fully and independently
scrutinised by the courts. Those arrested in this manner are at risk of periods of police custody during which safeguards
against torture or ill-treatment have previously proven weak. In addition, prohibitive bail provisions means that, in practice,
many of those arrested on suspicion of rebellion face months or years of incarceration before their guilt or innocence can
be established.(58)
Case
Study: Irma "Kathy" Alcantara
Irma "Kathy" Alcantara, aged 44
years, was killed around 10:00 in the morning on 5 December 2005. A Regional Coordinator and Bataan provincial Secretary General
of KPD (Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokrasya or Movement for National Democracy),(59) she was shot near a resort hotel
where she was participating in province-wide farmers and fisher folk conference, in Barangay Gabon, Abucay district, Bataan
province, Luzon.
According to witness statements gathered by human rights groups including Task Force Detainees of
the Philippines and KPD members, after Kathy had just left the resort having checked the kitchen arrangements for the conference,
two unidentified armed men on motorcycles opened fire with a .45 calibre pistol and three bullets passed through her neck
and right breast. Before the attack, witnesses reported seeing single motorcycles pass several times by the resort and another
single motorcycle with two or three unidentified men, parked in front at around 6:30 am. Kathy was taken to the Bataan Provincial Hospital by a nearby hardware store owner, but died before arrival. She was survived
by her husband, a farmers’ community organizer, and their two children.
Kathy was as veteran community organizer.
A Basic Christian Community Organiser in Luzon in the late 1970s, she was politically active in Bataan province since the
1980s, campaigning successfully against the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant during the Marcos presidency and involved in the Central
Luzon Alliance for a Sovereign Philippines.(60) As KPD regional coordinator, she had helped organise a number of community
mobilisations in relation to socio-economic and political issues.
KPD members at the conference reported that prior
to her death Kathy had received death threats and was under surveillance by suspected military or police personnel. A KPD
member stated that Kathy had shown him a cell-phone text message from colleagues in Zambales stating that they had been prevented
for joining a rally by police who then asked if they knew Kathy. He recalled that his co-workers had agreed never to identify
her as a number of unknown persons visited KPD offices asking for her and an increased number of unknown persons, some whom
they suspected as posing as vendors, appeared to be conducting surveillance in the area.
During the day of the incident,
a participant of the conference reportedly saw a silver motorcycle and three men standing only 50 meters away from the resort’s
gate. Other witnesses described seeing a white vehicle with three men aboard and a passenger allegedly wearing a white shirt
with the letters "PMA" (believed to stand for Philippine Military Academy). The conference participants described how, after
the shots were heard, police arrived quickly at the scene but appeared to focus on questioning the participants rather than
setting up check-points or pursuing the attackers. Some, in civilian clothes, reportedly entered the conference room, ordered
the participants not to leave and prevented them from going outside to attend to Kathy and see what was happening. Other witnesses
recalled that three other patrols, with 30 fully-armed police personnel between them, arrived after 30 minutes. Some were
recognised as coming from the PNP Abucay station. Kathy’s body was taken to a morgue and later released for burial,
reportedly without an autopsy. Following initial police questioning at the scene, no information on further police investigations
was made known to Kathy’s friends and relatives. Shortly after the attack a local radio station announced that the killing
was allegedly conducted by the NPA. The case remains unresolved.
4. The duty to protect the right to life
The right to life is a key human right. It is
enshrined in Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and provided for in Article 6 of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which the Philippines
is a state party. Article 6(1) of the ICCPR provides:
‘Every human being has the inherent right
to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.’
The prohibition on arbitrary deprivation of life
is non-derogable, which means that states cannot kill at will even in times of emergency.
The UN has developed more
detailed and specific standards which, while not legally binding per se, nevertheless represent global agreement by states
on how to best implement international human rights treaties, through legislation, regulation and during law enforcement operations.
These include the United Nations Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials (1979; (61)) the United Nations Basic Principles
on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials (1990;(62)) and the United Nations Principles on the Effective
Prevention and Investigation of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions (1989; (63)) The UN Basic Principles has 26
different rules setting out specific rights and obligations of police and other law enforcers, including an obligation to
use firearms only as a last resort when there is an imminent threat to life.
In addition, states have an obligation
to exercise due diligence to prevent arbitrary killing, both by officials and by non-state actors. In its General Comment
on Article 2 of the ICCPR, the Human Rights Committee has emphasised that:
‘The
Covenant cannot be viewed as a substitute for domestic criminal or civil law. However the positive obligations on States Parties
to ensure Covenant rights will only be fully discharged if individuals are protected by the State, not just against violations
of Covenant rights by its agents, but also against acts committed by private persons or entities that would impair the enjoyment
of Covenant rights in so far as they are amenable to application between private persons or entities. There may be circumstances
in which a failure to ensure Covenant rights as required by Article 2 would give rise to violations by States Parties of those
rights, as a result of States Parties' permitting or failing to take appropriate measures or to exercise due diligence to
prevent, punish, investigate or redress the harm caused by such acts by private persons or entities’.(64)
In the case of political killings in the Philippines,
regardless of the identity of the victims or perpetrators, the government must take all necessary steps, be they legal, administrative
or practical, to prevent such killings, investigate each of these killings thoroughly and impartially, bring to justice those
responsible for the killings and ensure reparations for the victims’ families, according to international standards.(65)
5. Political killings: an intensifying pattern
Between the late 1980s and 2000-1, as the scale
and intensity of the NPA’s insurgency declined gradually,(66) the number of alleged NPA rebels killed in direct armed
clashes or "encounters"(67) similarly decreased. However over the last six years this trend appeared to alter.(68) In addition,
especially since 2003, the number of fatal attacks by unidentified armed men on members of legal leftist political organisations
accused by the government of being "front" organizations of the CPP-NPA, including Bayan Muna, Anakpawis, Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN - New Patriotic Alliance) and others, has undergone a marked increase.
Amnesty International believes that these successive
killings are marked by common features. These include the political affiliations of the victims; the methodology of attacks;
an apparent climate of impunity which, in practice, has shielded those responsible from prosecution; and repeated reports
that military or other state agents have been directly involved in the attacks, or else have acquiesced or been complicit
in them.
The organization believes that the pattern of
killings, sustained over at least the past five years, amount to far more than the rise and fall of a normal crime rate cycle
as suggested by some police officers.(69)
5.1 The number of political killings
While a range of sources, including journalists,
human rights workers and lawyers, list at least 244 killings of members of party-list groups and other leftist activists in
the period from when President Arroyo took office in 2001 until July 2006,(70) the exact scale of killings and true nature
of each incident remains difficult to determine.
In many cases there have been no conclusive
findings as to whether a particular killing was a politically motivated assassination, resulted from an unlawful attack on
civilians by security personnel during operations against armed insurgents, or was a ordinary criminal offence unrelated to
politics. Disputes over the identity and motivations of the perpetrators have continued, with government officials claiming
that a proportion of the attacks are related to factional disputes within the communist movement, are a result of local political
or electoral feuds, or stem from personal or business disputes.
However, according to documentation compiled
by the human rights group Karapatan, (71) which works with mass-based grassroots people’s organizations
nationwide, at least 80 members of progressive leftist parties were killed during 2005 alone. These include leaders (i.e.
regional or provincial organizers), members or supporters of Bayan Muna (28 killed), of Anakpawis (14 killed)
and of other groups.(72)
Initial investigations conducted and compiled
by the Philippine Commission on Human Rights by March 2006 found that in their estimation at least 42 of 143 complaints of
murder and summary executions lodged with the Commission since 2005 by cause-orientated groups including Karapatan,
Bayan Muna and Anakpawis were politically motivated, and that at least seven had been directly attributed to
the military through witness statements.(73)
The human rights documentation group Task Force
Detainees of the Philippines received
at least 90 reports of extrajudicial executions in 2005, but was able to investigate only a limited number, obtaining affidavits
or other corroborating documentation related to at least 12 political killings during the year.
In May 2006, as political controversy over the
political killings mounted, the Philippine National Police (PNP) announced that at least 122 killings of leftist activists
had taken place since 2001. Of these 122 killings recorded by the PNP, 93 were reported by the police to be members of Bayan
Muna, 23 of Anakpawis and four of Gabriela. As a response the PNP declared the formation, with the
Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), of a special unit, Task Force Usig, to manage and coordinate police
groups assigned to investigate these cases.(74)
The PNP also stated that 18 cases had been filed
in court in relation to the attacks, while acknowledging that 85 per cent of the 122 killings remained "under investigation".
The police stated that soldiers or paramilitaries were suspects in 25 of the reported cases, while a "purge"(75) or factional
violence within the communist movement itself was believed the cause of 13 other of the killings. Though the PNP announcement
of May 2006 confirmed that soldiers or paramilitaries were suspects in at least 25 cases, the AFP continue to deny that its
personnel are responsible for the killings, or have organised or colluded with non-state gunmen (including former insurgents
now reportedly acting as military "assets") to carry out the attacks.
In June the Secretary of the Interior and Local
Government stated that of 114 party list members killed since 2001, suspects were arrested in just three cases and with no
convictions reported.(76)
Case Study: Rafael Markus Bangit
Rafael Markus "Makoy" Bangit, aged 45 and married with four children, was shot and killed
on 8 June 2006 around 7.00 in the evening in San Isidro, Echague, Isabela province (Northern Luzon). He had been travelling
with his son by bus from his home in Tabuk, Kalinga province, to Baguio
City where he worked.
Two unidentified gunman wearing black "bonnet"
face-masks approached and shot Markus Bangit as he was about to re-board the bus after it stopped at a roadside restaurant
to allow passengers to take dinner. An initial police incident report stated that the gunman opened fired at Markus with a
.45 calibre pistol and then continued to fire successive shots as he lay on the ground. He died from four gunshot wounds to
his chest and stomach.
Another passenger, Dr Gloria Tasuga PhD, Principal of the Quezon National High School, Isabela
province, screamed and called for help on witnessing the attack and was shot several times. She died immediately. Markus Bangit’s
son was physically unharmed. Police later recovered seven .45 calibre shell cases and one slug from the scene, and ascertained
from witnesses that the van used by the assailants had been following the bus for some time.
Markus Bangit was a leader
of the Malbong tribe in Kalinga province and became a padang
(peace-pact holder) building and representing traditional peace and friendship agreements between his and other indigenous
communities. A long-time indigenous peoples activist, he played a prominent role in opposing the Chico Dam Project in the
1970s and later became Coordinator of the Elders Desk of the Cordillera Peoples Alliance, a chapter of Bagong Alyansang
Makabayan (BAYAN). A former barangay councillor, he was also Vice-Chair of the Kalinga provincial chapter of Bayan
Muna
.
According to colleagues at the Cordillera Peoples Alliance – who in March had complained to the local
police that their offices in Baguio were under intensive surveillance
by unidentified men - Markus Bangit mentioned that he thought he was being watched and had been followed while he was shopping
in Tabuk with his family. In June police submitted the recovered shell cases and slug for forensic examination, but reportedly
no findings of the initial police investigations had been released by late July 2006.
5.2 Communist "fronts": the resurgence of "red-labelling"
Human rights violations against suspected "sympathisers"
of the CPP-NPA have long been a feature of anti-insurgency operations in the Philippines.
From the 1970’s to the early 1990’s the practice of "red-labelling", the public labelling of leftist critics of
the government as "subversives" or members of communist "front organizations", was seen by Amnesty International, Task Force
Detainees of the Philippines and other human rights groups as directly linked to the high levels of extrajudicial executions,
"disappearances", arbitrary arrests and torture of members of legal political groups and non-governmental organizations.(77)
Peasants, trade unionists, church, social and human rights activists were portrayed in this manner as "legitimate" targets
within the broader counter-insurgency campaign. Many were also placed, without opportunity for rebuttal, on AFP "Orders of
Battle" (lists of people wanted by the security forces for alleged subversion) and, often receiving death threats from AFP
and police personnel, paramilitaries or unofficial vigilante groups, were at particular risk of serious human rights violations.
Concern over a resurgence of such labelling
– and an apparent link to a parallel rise in the number of political killings – has increased during President
Arroyo’s administration as provincial military commanders made public statements linking legal leftist parties directly
with the CPP-NPA. One of the most prominent among these commanders remains Major General Jovito Palparan. In a television
interview in August 2002 then Colonel Palparan labelled Bayan Muna an "NPA front". He also publicly accused Karapatan
and the women’s organization, Gabriela, of being "NPA recruiters".(78)
Similarly in September 2002, an army commander
in Cebu denied Karapatan human rights workers permission to visit a man detained on
suspicion of being an NPA rebel. The commander is reported to have said, "There is the possibility that we will shoot them
(Karapatan members), depending on their action, because they are our enemies". In a separate radio interview, he is
also reported to have described Karapatan as "an enemy which hasn’t done anything but support the NPA and find
ways of destroying the government".(79)
The perception that a group of officers within
the AFP recognised no distinction between the NPA and legal leftist parties, and rejected the legitimacy of leftist progressive
groups’ participation in democratic political processes, was also reflected in the circulation in 2005 of AFP treatises
on the CPP-NPA "revolutionary struggle" and what the AFP regarded as necessary resultant counter-insurgency strategies. The
treatises outlined the "complementary, interrelated and interactive" nature of the armed, the legal community and parliamentary
struggles(80), and described the targeted infiltration and the CPP-NPA "capture" of particular sectoral communities (including
peasants, urban poor and indigenous people) to exploit pressing social issues such as land reform and the impact of mining
and other controversial development projects. Referring also to alleged penetration of local government units by party-list
groups and the manipulation of government local development programs, the treatises listed alleged "front" non-government
organizations (NGOs) and called for a coordinated AFP campaign to "neutralize" CPP-NPA programs within vulnerable sectors
and communities.(81)
Major General Palparan in particular emerged
as the focus of accusations by leftist groups that the military was responsible for sharply increased numbers of killings
of leftist activists in regions where he was given command, including Samar and, currently, Central Luzon.
In February 2006, Major General Palparan publicly reiterated that the government must confront the insurgency at all levels,
reducing their support systems, including NGO’s infiltrated or controlled by the CPP that provide the "materials, the
shelter" for the NPA. He also described the congressional party-list members as directing or "providing the day-to-day policies
of the [rebel] movement". He warned of necessary and tolerable "collateral damage" in the anti-insurgency campaign, and, referring
to vigilante killings by anti-communist elements outside the AFP, stated that the military "alone" should not be blamed. (82)
Subsequently, labelling leftist party-list leaders as "enemies of the state", he also called for reinstitution of the Anti-Subversion
Act to again make membership of the CPP a criminal offence.(83)
Though reassured by President Arroyo’s
public condemnation of political killings in July 2006,(84) the absence of consistent denunciation, at all levels of government,
of any form of official involvement in political killings contributed to persistent concerns that such counter-insurgency
strategies would consolidate, in practice, into an implicit policy of toleration of such political killings. Such concerns
had deepened as senior government officials, including prominent members of the Cabinet Oversight Committee on Internal Security
(COC-IS),(85) publicly endorsed such counter-insurgency strategies, and in addition, robustly defended the arrest or threatened
arrest of party-list Congressional representatives for rebellion. In March 2006 National Security Adviser Noberto Gonzales
declared that the government was beginning a crackdown on all known "communist fronts" in society, and would achieve its goal
of destroying the CPP-NPA by the year 2010.(86)
Case Study: Reverend Edison
Lapuz
Reverend Edison Lapuz, aged 38 and married with
two children, was killed on May 12, 2005, at around 6:30 in the evening, while both he and his wife, Emma, were resting at
her father’s house in Barangay Crossing, San Isidro, Leyte.
They had returned to the house that afternoon with at least 10 relatives and friends after attending the funeral of Emma’s
father.
Two unidentified armed men reportedly entered the house and, at a distance of about two meters, shot Reverend
Lapuz in the head and stomach. He died on the spot. A friend, Alfredo Manilao, a local barangay councillor and peasant organizer,
was also shot in the attack and died later in hospital.
Reverend Lapuz was a Minister of the United Church of Christ
in the Philippines, serving on its National Council and leading its community
of rural churches in the Eastern Leyte region. Active in seeking to defend the rights and
livelihoods of marginalised communities, including peasants and fisher folk, he also served as a regional coordinator for
the party-list group Bayan Muna, supporting its peaceful participation in parliamentary politics. Following the killing
of local human rights lawyer Felidito Dacut, he
played a leading role in forming a protest group calling for investigation and prosecution of those responsible.
According
to reports compiled by a human rights documentation team from Karapatan that visited the area shortly after the attack,
local residents recalled seeing four unidentified men on two motorcycles passing the neighbourhood prior to the shooting.
Reverend Lapuz had reportedly been subjected to surveillance by suspected military personnel in the months prior to the attack.
His sister described how uniformed military personnel had come to their father’s house in October 2004, identified themselves
as members of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines, and requested
detailed information about her brother, his address in Tacloban
City and his current whereabouts. Military personnel reportedly made
a visit to their father’s house and asked similar questions about a week before the attack.
Prior to his death,
Reverend Lapuz expressed concern to fellow church workers in Manila
that he and his colleagues were under military surveillance and subject to harassment. It was also reported that his name
had been was included in a military "Order of Battle" list and that his photograph was displayed in a local camp of the police
Regional Mobile Group - a unit often involved in counter-insurgency operations.
According to reports collated by the
Asian Human Rights Commission, there are continuing serious concerns about the course of police investigations into the killings
and, in particular, reported failures to offer adequate protection to relatives and other witnesses who fear reprisals if
they involve themselves further with police investigations. Investigations are reported to remain "stalled" and, over a year
since the attack, no arrests have been made or charges filed and the case remains unresolved.
5.3 The background of the victims and location of attacks
The majority of the victims of political killings
have been unarmed civilians, members of the legal political left, primarily Bayan Muna, Anakpawis and Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN - New Patriotic Alliance), but including activists from a range of leftist sectoral or community
organisations. Those killed have also included members of leftist groups who have split from the CPP, including the Kilusan
para sa Pambansang Demokraysa (KPD - Movement for National Democracy). Both men and women have been targeted, with the
victims including community organizers, church workers and priests, human rights activists, trade union and peasant leaders,
journalists, indigenous peoples activists, elected local officials and political activists.
Attacks have occurred nationwide, though human
rights and other organisations have noted periodic, marked increases in particular regions, notably Mindoro Oriental,(87)
Eastern Visayas and Central Luzon (including Bulacan, Pampanga, Bataan and Nueva Ecija provinces).(88) According to local
human rights groups, these regional fluctuations were allegedly linked to the assignment of Major General Palparan as commanding
officer in these regions. Major General Palparan has denied any involvement in such killings.
5.4 Methodology of attacks and suspected perpetrators
The predominant method of attack has been shootings
by unidentified assailants, mostly riding tandem on a motorcycle, who often obscure their identity with "bonnet" face masks
or helmets. At times the assailants are supported by other men on motorcycles nearby or use unmarked vans. Many attacks were
described as having been carried out in a "professional" manner, with the killers striking in broad daylight in public places,
firing a limited number of shots targeted at the head or trunk of the body of the targeted person, before escaping unimpeded.
According to reports, a significant number of
attacks have been proceeded by warnings or death threats, and by patterns of surveillance by alleged security force personnel
which reportedly led up to targeted attacks in or near the victims homes or offices, or while they undertook routine journeys.
Following the killing of at least three activists in northern Luzon 2005,(89) leaders from the Cordillera Peoples Alliance
(CPA) and Bayan Muna-Cordillera, reported that they had been informed by sources within the AFP that they had been
included on a military list as targets for attack. They described subsequent intensive surveillance or "casing" operations
conducted by suspected military intelligence personnel, including being followed, vehicles carrying men (at times covering
their faces) stationed outside their office or driving repeatedly by, and apparent attempts to break-in to their offices or
cars.
In other cases, well-established AFP counter-insurgency
techniques appeared to be linked to subsequent attacks. The practice of "zoning", whereby the military target a village or
district believed to be influenced by the CPP-NPA, order the inhabitants to assemble to listen to lectures, at times using
former insurgents now being used as military "assets", about the communist threat so as to encourage informants and identify
alleged communist supporters within the community, reportedly leads to the public labelling of legal left activists, or their
inclusion on military "orders of battle".(90)
Once named, the threat of subsequent assassination
attacks by unidentified men is markedly increased. In this manner Tarlac City Councillor Attorney Abelardo Ladera(91) shot
on the highway in central Luzon in 2005, had reportedly been named in a news briefing as an NPA contact in the region,(92)
while Jose "Pepe" Manegdeg,(93) shot dead in Ilocos Sur in November 2005, had been labelled by the AFP as a NPA supporter
and had received death threats
5.5 Ineffective investigations and a climate of impunity
Prosecution
and punishment break the cycle of crime and impunity. It protects the public from the culprits repeating their crimes and
it helps to deter others from committing similar crimes by raising the real threat that they too, may be caught and punished.(94)
Failure
to investigate political killings effectively and to prosecute the perpetrators risks perpetuating a cycle of human rights
violations, not least by sending a message of de facto state tolerance for such practices. If military or other officials,
or others linked to them, believe that they are, in practice, immune from prosecution for such crimes they will be more likely
to repeat them. Such a climate of impunity undermines public confidence in the administration of justice, eroding the rule
of law and respect for human rights.
In the Philippines while the authorities routinely
launch police investigations into political and other killings, and in May 2006 established a special unit - Task Force Usig
- to better coordinate investigations into political killings at a national level, Amnesty International is concerned at persistent
reports that the majority of investigations do not meet international standards as set forth in the UN Principles on the Effective
Prevention and Investigation of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions, as supplemented by UN Manual Effective Prevention
and Investigation of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions. (95) Amnesty International is further concerned that these
investigations have reportedly not led to the conviction of any of the perpetrators of the hundreds of killings of leftist
activists since 2001.
An international fact-finding mission of lawyers
and judges,(96) who visited the Philippines
in June 2006 in response to reported extrajudicial executions of members of the legal profession within the context of a pattern
of political killings, found that in the cases of 15 lawyers and ten judges killed since 2001 none of the perpetrators have
been convicted. The Secretary of the Interior and Local Government, responsible for the police, also informed the mission
that Task Force Usig had recorded a total of 114 party-list members killed since 2001. Out of this total, 27 cases had been
filed in court and the remaining 86 are still under investigation. Out of the 27 cases filed in court, the PNP has arrested
suspects in only three cases. No convictions have been reported.
Case Study: Abelardo Ladera
Attorney Abel
Ladera, aged 45 years old, was killed at around 1:00 in the afternoon on 4 March 2005. A City Councillor of Tarlac, Central
Luzon, Attorney Ladera was shot dead by an unidentified assailant armed with a rifle as he was on his way home via the McArthur
Highway in Barangay Paraiso, Tarlac City.
Councillor Ladera had stopped at an auto supply store in Barangay Paraiso
to buy spare parts with his companion, Alberto Sebastian, when he was shot in his upper left chest. He was taken by his driver
to the Central Luzon
Doctors Hospital but he was
declared dead on arrival. According to an autopsy report he was killed instantly by a single bullet piercing his heart.
Councillor
Ladera was a Tarlac provincial chapter leader of Bayan Muna and played a role in representing the interests of sugar
mill workers and farmers involved in strike negotiations at the nearby Hacienda Luisita and Central Azucarera de Tarlac sugar
plantations. In November 2004, seven sugar workers and their supporters were killed as gunfire broke out as police and soldiers
violently dispersed a picket line.
In January 2005 military officers from the Northern Luzon Command described the
Hacienda Luisita strike as a "matter of national security" and listed Councillor Ladera, along with other trade union officials,
as "the contact person of the CPP and its armed wing, the NPA, in Hacienda Luisita"(97) and "enemies of the state". Several
pamphlets allegedly issued by the military falsely portrayed Councillor Ladera as the nephew of a well-known NPA commander,
and military reports publicly implicated him in claims that NPA fighters had been responsible for the violence during the
Hacienda Luisita picket dispersal.
Police stated that at least five witnesses had seen the attack and the police reportedly
constituted a local task force to conduct investigations. Initial inquiries linked the attack to Councillor Ladera’s
involvement in the Hacienda Luisita labor dispute. Police later announced that a suspect, who has already been facing charges
of robbery and murder, had been linked to the killing and that a note with his handwriting was found near the auto supply
store where Ladera was killed. The suspect, described as "hired gunman" and former NPA member, was also linked to the killing
of Reverend William Taneda(98) and police suspected that both attacks may have been instigated by an anti-communist vigilante
group.
However amid concerns expressed by the Governor of Tarlac that that lack of witness protection and evidence
was preventing the police from identifying and prosecuting the perpetrators, the case remains unresolved.
In explaining
the difficulties in investigating such cases, senior police officers described how forensic capability and technology was
not yet sufficiently developed, so that it cannot stand alone as evidence in the absence of eye-witnesses. In May 2006, a
police director working with Task Force Usig had also acknowledged that the refusal of witnesses to come forward is a major
obstacle in PNP efforts to investigate and to collect evidence sufficient to support the filing of criminal charges.(99) The
police also blamed witnesses for their unwillingness to cooperate, stating that it "unnecessarily" caused undue delays in
the prosecution of such cases.(100) While acknowledging that witnesses are fearful of reprisals, one officer suggested this
was due not to government institutions, but to a "general fear" of revenge by the NPA. However the lawyers and families of
the victims questioned by the international fact-finding mission confirmed that they mistrusted and feared the police and
that in one case, the witnesses to a killing had told the victim’s family that they had been instructed to sign a statement
different from they one they had given police.
Families of the victims have repeatedly complained of protracted and
inconclusive police investigations which are reported to be indefinitely "stalled" due to an "absence of leads", or to have
been "solved" if the investigating officers have filed an initial police investigation report with the prosecutor –
which subsequently may not lead to the prosecutor filing charges and applying for a warrant of arrest.(101) In conjunction
with lack of confidence in the impartiality of the police, fear of reprisals and a lack of an effective witness protection
programme, most investigations remain ineffective and fail to lead to the identification, arrest, trial and conviction of
the perpetrators.
Based on the requirement of Principle 9 of the UN Principles on the Effective Prevention and Investigation
of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions which states that "there shall be thorough, prompt and impartial investigations",
Amnesty International believes that urgent steps are needed to ensure investigations are indeed effective. In order to exercise
due diligence in the protection of the right to life and to combat the current pattern of political killings, police and other
investigative units must be independent and impartial, be adequately resourced and have the necessary criminal detection,
forensic and other investigative skills.(102)
Ineffective investigations, which fail to lead to prosecutions and convictions,
have played a role in sustaining a broader climate of impunity that has been allowed to persist since the presidency of Ferdinand
Marcos (1965-1986). The vast majority of soldiers, paramilitaries and police responsible for endemic human rights violations
during the Marcos years have never been prosecuted and most of their victims have received neither justice nor redress.(103)
Although President Marcos’ successor, President Corazon Aquino (1986-1992), promulgated a new Constitution, restored
democratic institutions and instituted mechanisms for the protection of human rights, an entrenched public belief that a climate
of impunity protected security forces personnel responsible for past and continuing patterns of grave human violations remained
intact. President Aquino’s administration, attempting to manage a political transition from the former martial law regime
and facing direct challenges from repeated coup attempts by right-wing military rebels, considered it necessary to maintain
the support of loyal military leaders. To this end there was no government pressure for systematic investigation and prosecution
of security personnel accused of perpetrating human violations under martial law and in the context of past and renewed counter-insurgency
operations.(104)
Amnesty International(105) and other international(106)
and national human rights groups(107) repeatedly expressed grave concern that the continuing paucity of prosecutions and convictions
of state perpetrators of human rights violations, including extrajudicial executions, "disappearances"(108) and torture,(109)
risked entrenching a de facto climate of impunity that emboldened security personnel to commit further violations in
the context of anti-insurgency operations. A bleak picture of persistent failures in the administration of justice was highlighted
by the fact that of the 1,509 cases of alleged human rights violations filed by the Philippine Commission on Human Rights
before the courts between 1987 and 1990, only 11 cases resulted in sanctions against the perpetrators.(110)
Amnesty International is concerned that flaws
within the administration of justice that have long underpinned a de facto climate of impunity - including ineffective
investigations, reluctance of witnesses to come forward for fear of reprisals, and an apparent lack of political will to ensure
the prosecution of suspects, continues to endure. These flaws were sharply illustrated by a pattern of killings of street
children and other suspected criminals by unidentified "vigilantes" in Davao City (Mindanao) and Cebu City(111) (Visayas)
in recent years. In Davao City
at least 390 "criminals", mostly alleged drugs pushers, solvent abusers or petty thieves, and including street children and
youth gang members, have reportedly been shot dead in the city since 2001. The majority of attacks were carried by unidentified
men on motorcycles, and local human rights groups expressed alarm at reports that local police were directly responsible,
or else had colluded with private "vigilante" gangs in carrying out such killings in an effort to combat criminality and "clean
up" the city’s streets. These concerns intensified as the city’s mayor appeared to condone the killings, while
denying any direct official responsibility.(112) Police investigations have failed to lead to the identification and arrest
of those responsible and Amnesty International is not aware of a single prosecution that has led to the conviction of any
of the perpetrators.
National and international journalist groups(113)
have also expressed concern at the high number of unsolved killings of journalists in the Philippines. At least 64 journalists are reported to have been killed since 1986
as a result of their work, with at least 10 in 2005 and 9 in the first seven months of 2006. Prosecution and conviction of
those responsible remain rare. The conviction in November 2005 of a former police officer responsible for the murder in 2002
of Edgar Damalerio, a radio journalist in Pagadian (Mindanao), is reported to be only the
third such conviction since 1986.(114) During the investigation and subsequent trial, Edgar Damalerio’s family were
repeatedly threatened and one witness was killed. The court rejected as false evidence given by the accused associates, including
police officers.
Failures to prosecute and convict security personnel
suspected of carrying out or being complicit in grave human rights violations continues to fuel the perception that a climate
of impunity is shielding such officers from being held to account. Prominent, well-publicised examples include the failure
to bring suspects to trial in the case of the reported extrajudicial execution by police of 11 alleged members of the Kuratong
Baleleng bank robbery gang in a Manila street in 1995,(115) and the failure to hold anyone accountable for the alleged
torture by police in 1996 of six men accused of the murder of Rolando Abadilla, a former Marcos-era police intelligence officer.(116)
In this context, public trust in the integrity
and effectiveness of the criminal justice system as a whole remains at a low ebb. Amid periodic allegations of corruption
by some public officers, confidence that the right of victims of human rights violations to justice and redress will be respected
continues to be undermined by persistent reports of ineffective, protracted investigations by police, public prosecutors or
the Office of the Ombudsman;(117) by lengthy delays in the course of criminal trials; and by the perception that those with
wealth or political connections are able to improperly exert influence over the investigative agencies or the courts.(118)
Victims of human rights violations and their
families, particularly those from poor or marginalized communities, often consider that they face overwhelming obstacles in
accessing justice - particularly when the alleged perpetrators are military or police personnel. As noted above and reflected
in the case studies in this report, a major obstacle in combating impunity in the Philippines is the reluctance of witnesses to come forward. Serious intimidation
of witnesses has long been a feature of cases involving attempts to investigate and prosecute cases of human rights violations
taking place within the context of the counter-insurgency campaign. Death threats and other intimidation of witnesses, at
times accompanied by offers of financial compensation or other inducements, have frequently led to "amicable" settlements
out of court.
In addition, many victims and their relatives
from poorer communities are unable to sustain the protracted financial and emotional strain of pursuing a complaint or a criminal
case, especially when required to travel to distant investigative offices or courts for hearings that may be subject to repeated
last-minute delays, administratively "shelved" or transferred to a different tribunal.(119) Amid such pressures complainants
and key witnesses or relatives of the victims are liable to refuse to involve themselves in police investigations, or to withdraw
from further participation in court proceedings or investigations conducted by the Philippine Commission on Human Rights or
Office of the Ombudsman, thus restricting the ability of prosecutors and the courts to secure convictions.
Case Study: Father William Tadena
Reverend
Father William Tadena, aged 37 years, was killed shortly after 8:00 in the morning on 13 March 2005. A parish priest of the
Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI) in La Paz, Tarlac, Luzon, he was attacked when travelling
in his jeep with three colleagues along the provincial highway from Barangay Guevarra towards La Paz to celebrate his second mass of the day.
Father Tadena was Chairman of the
Human Rights and Social Concerns Committee of the IFI Diocese of Tarlac, a member the local chapters of the Promotion of Church
People’s Response and Karapatan. He was a critic of the owners of the Hacienda Luisita sugar plantation in Tarlac
and actively supported workers and farmers in their lengthy strike over alleged failures to honour agrarian land reform agreements
and other issues in Hacienda Luisita. He was also worked in support of homeless and other marginalised communities in the
province.
According to witness reports collated by Bayan Muna and Karapatan, several unidentified persons
with "bonnet" face-masks were seen in the vicinity of Father Tadena’s parish prior to attack. Subsequently, as Father
Tadena drove along the highway near the IFI Chapel, an unidentified person called out "Father" and waved at him to stop. When
he slowed down his vehicle two unidentified men on a motorcycle approached his jeep. Father Tadena sensed that it was an ambush
and shouted to his companions in the vehicle that they were in danger. At that moment one of the perpetrators fired three
gunshots into his back. The gunman then positioned himself beside the jeep and fired two more shots into Father Taneda’s
neck and head before rejoining his accomplice on the motorcycle and making an escape.
Several IFI parishioners hurried
to the scene and took Father Tadena to hospital, where he later died. According to autopsy reports, the victim suffered gunshot
wounds from a .45 calibre pistol in the back, neck and head. Father Tadena’s sacristan, parish secretary and guitarist
who had accompanied him in his vehicle were injured in the attack, two with gunshot wounds.
According to newspaper
reports, two months after attack the Tarlac City
police chief announced that a suspect had been arrested in Mandaluyong
City on a number of separate robbery and murder charges. The suspect,
described by police as a former NPA member turned "gunman for hire", was later reportedly identified by one of Father Taneda’s
companions as one of the attackers. The police claimed also that the suspect’s handwriting had been found on notes found
near both the scene of Father Taneda’s killing and that of Abelardo Ladera.(120) The notes were reportedly written in
the name of a local "vigilante" group, KKK, which had denounced alleged "atrocities" carried out by the NPA and its supporters.
The regional office of the Philippines Commission on Human Rights reported that they had concluded their inquiries but recommended
further investigations.
Murder charges were reportedly filed against the suspect and another, also described as a former
NPA member. According to information received, court proceedings have not concluded and the case remains ongoing.
Amnesty International believes that effective
protection of witnesses and the relatives of the victims must be a priority element within PNP investigation efforts. A number
of groups including the Asian Human Rights Commission have campaigned
to ensure that witness protection programmes in the Philippines
are robust and effective. Amnesty International shares their serious concerns that the implementation of the relevant legislation,
the Witness Protection, Security and Benefit Act (RA 6981), fails, in practice, to ensure the safety of witnesses. Under the
Act, the Department of Justice is empowered to deliver a program of protection to witnesses to grave felonies, including secure
housing facilities, relocation or change of personnel identity, and assistance in obtaining a means of livelihood. The law
also provides that the court or investigating authority shall assure a speedy trial, where a witness admitted into the program
shall testify, and shall endeavour to finish the proceeding within three months for the filing of the case. However as noted
by the Ateneo Human Rights Centre,(121) the reality is that most cases take far longer than three months not least because
of postponements, usually requested by the accused, and the length of time that the Supreme Court takes in deciding change
of venue petitions for the protection of witnesses. Most witnesses are reported to lack confidence in the program, and fear
that, given prolonged delays in criminal proceedings, it will not be able to offer protection to them or their families which
may be needed to extend over years.
As described earlier, Article 6 of the ICCPR,
which provides for the right to life, further states that "No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life".(122) In order
to effectively combat patterns of politically motivated extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killings in the Philippines,
the government has a clear duty to consistently condemn and prohibit all such killings, to ensure each is thoroughly and independently
investigated, to bring suspected perpetrators to justice and to ensure reparations to victims.
As stated in 2005 by the UN Special Rapporteur
on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary killings these duties lie on the authorities in relation to killings by non-state actors,
when they act with the knowledge or acquiescence of the authorities and as a result are not subject to effective investigation,
prosecution or punishment. In addition the Special Rapporteur state that crimes, including murder, carried out by individuals
can also give rise to state responsibility in instances where the State has failed to take all appropriate measures to deter,
prevent, and punish the perpetrators as well as address any attitudes or conditions in society which encourage or facilitate
such crimes.
"In most situations, isolated killing of individuals
will constitute a simple crime and not give rise to any governmental responsibility. But once a pattern becomes clear in which
the response of the Government is clearly inadequate, its responsibility under international human rights law becomes applicable.
Through its inaction the Government confers a degree of impunity upon the killers."(123)
An essential part of due diligence of the part
of the state, and a crucial component in the battle against impunity, is the conduct of effective investigations which lead
to prosecution and punishment of perpetrators of extrajudicial killings. The UN Human Rights Committee, responsible for monitoring
compliance of state signatories with obligations under the ICCPR, identified this as among its principal subjects of concern
after considering the periodic reports of the Philippines in October 2003.(124) Amnesty International shares this conviction
and urges the government to address the problem of adequate investigations and prosecutions in the Philippines. This is particularly
urgent in relation to the continuing pattern of political killings.
6. Conclusions
Unearthing the evidence establishing responsibility
for the current pattern of political killings will take political will. It will require political determination and persistent
practical efforts to undo the legacy of impunity, which has the potential to undermine efforts to hold perpetrators of political
killings accountable and is aided by the assumption that such killings are to some degree an acceptable by-product of continuing
armed conflict.
It will take sustained efforts to unravel the chronology of events that led each attack, to establish
the facts constituting every political killing and to establish whether there was an official chain of command underlying
both the crime and its cover-up. Effective, robust measures are necessary to protect those who come forward to assist the
case.
Unless these steps are taken, the corrosive
impact of political killings will continue and hopes for a just and lasting peace, as outlined in the government’s 2004-2010
Peace Plan(125) will remain unrealized.
The struggle for respect for human rights, fought
with high cost from the time of President Marcos and reflected in the 1986 Constitution and the Philippines’ ratification of international human rights treaties, is facing
a serious challenge. Within the context of "all-out-war" against communist insurgents the rising incidence of political killings
risks a retaliatory spiral of killings by armed groups. The need is pressing for both sides of the conflict, supported by
all sectors of civil society, to assert and commit to renewed respect for human rights.
7. Recommendations
In 1993 Amnesty International adopted a 14-point
Program for the Prevention of Extrajudicial executions based on the United National Principles on the Effective Prevention
and Investigation of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions (see Appendix I). If adopted and fully implemented, the
organization believes these would effectively combat the practice of political killings, end impunity for those who commit
them and ensure reparations to victims.
In light of the immediate threat of further
political killings and other human rights violations in the Philippines,
Amnesty International highlights below a selection of key recommendations, grouped under four headings, addressed to the Government
of the Philippines, other national and
international institutions, and armed groups.
Amnesty International believes that joint concerted
action to fulfil these recommendations - actively supported and encouraged by religious, media, business and other groups
within civil society - is required. Only then can the conditions be created in which respect for human rights becomes the
foundations for the building of a just and lasting peace.
I. Reassert Respect for Human Rights: the
immediate priority
To put a stop to the political killings Amnesty
International urges the Government of the Philippines
to take the following urgent steps:
Official Condemnation
Consistently and at every level of government
condemn all political killings;
Chain of command control
Prohibit orders from superior officers or public
authorities authorizing, tacitly encouraging or inciting other persons to carry out unlawful killings;
Ensure that those in charge of the security
forces maintain strict chain of command control to ensure that officers under their command do not commit political killings;
Ensure that military or police personnel suspected
of involvement in political killings are suspended from active duty during the investigation;
Action against "death squads" and vigilantes
Prohibit and disband any "death squads", private
armies, vigilantes, criminal gangs and paramilitary forces operating outside the chain of command but with official support
or acquiescence;
Members of such groups who have perpetrated
political killings should be brought to justice;
II. Guarantee the Administration of Justice:
reject impunity
Investigation
Ensure that all complaints and reports of political
killings are investigated promptly, impartially and effectively;
To this end, ensure that investigation agencies
at the national, provincial and local level fulfil the following criteria:
· They are independent of those allegedly responsible.
This applies both to individual investigators and to the investigating body as a whole;
· They have the necessary powers
and resources;
· Personnel carrying out the investigation and their staff are professionally competent for the required
tasks;
· The investigation creates the opportunity for the effective questioning of witnesses;
· Witnesses and investigators
are protected against intimidation and reprisals;
· The methods and findings of investigations are made public;
Institute
effective oversight by a body independent of Task Force Usig to ensure the above criteria are fulfilled. The independent oversight
body should also ensure that all investigations of political killings are supported by effective coordination between the
Philippine National Police, National Bureau of Investigation, Department of Justice and Department of National Defence;
Prosecution
Ensure that those responsible for political
killings are brought to justice. This principle should apply wherever such people happen to be, wherever the crime was committed,
whatever the identity of the victim and perpetrator and no matter how much time has elapsed since the commission of the crime;
Protection against death threats and other intimidation
Take action to fully implement the Witness Protection,
Security and Benefit Act (RA 6981) in order to:
Ensure
safe, reliable and durable mechanisms guaranteeing the participation of witnesses to political killings in the legal process;
Ensure that others
involved in the investigation including complainants, human rights defenders and lawyers should be also protected from intimidation
and reprisals;
Compensation
Dependents of victims of political killings
should be entitled to fair and adequate redress from the state, including financial compensation.
III. The Peace Process: compliance with the
Human Rights Agreement
In order to rebuild trust and create conditions
conducive to the revival of the peace process, human rights must be respected and protected. Amnesty International urges all
sides involved in the armed conflict to reassert respect for human rights and:
Recommit
to and ensure compliance with the 1995 Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian
Law (CARHRIHL);
Enhance respect for
human rights on the ground by taking steps to ensure the operation of the Joint Monitoring Committee of the CARHRIHL;
Take action to implement
remedial and protective measures recommended by the Joint Monitoring Committee following its consideration of complaints of
breaches of CARHRIHL.
IV.
Other Human Rights Mechanisms: a call for action
National:
As part of coordinated efforts to investigate
all complaints of political killings by relevant investigative agencies and human rights institutions, Amnesty International
urges:
The
Deputy Ombudsman for the Military and Other Law Enforcement Offices to conduct prompt, thorough, impartial and effective investigations
into all complaints of political killings allegedly involving military, police or other security personnel. These investigations
should, as appropriate, lead promptly to recommendations to the Department of Justice to file criminal charges against those
found responsible;
The Philippine Commission
of Human Rights be adequately resourced to enable it to conduct comprehensive and thorough investigations of complaints of
political killings. The Commission should vigorously exercise its right not to endorse the promotion of military and other
security personnel it finds to have been responsible for human rights violations.
International:
The UN Human Rights Committee, responsible for
monitoring the Philippines’ compliance
with its obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), made a series of recommendations
in 2003.(126)
Responding to a situation it regarded as conducive
to a perpetration of further violations of human rights and to a culture of impunity, the Committee called for government
action in respect of the lack of appropriate measures to investigate crimes allegedly committed by state security forces and
agents; action to prosecute and punish the perpetrators; and action to respond to reports of intimidation and threats impeding
the right to an effective remedy by those subjected to human rights violations.
Amnesty
International urges the Government of the Philippines
to take determined, prompt steps to ensure effective implementation these recommendations;
Amnesty International
also urges the Government of the Philippines, in responding to the recommendations
of the Human Rights Committee, to access the expertise of relevant UN special mechanisms by inviting the Special Rapporteur
on Extrajudicial Executions, the Special Representative on Human Rights Defenders, and representatives of the Working Group
on Arbitrary Detention to visit the Philippines.
In
addition, in 2006 the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU)(127) expressed concerns as regards possible arbitrary deprivation of
liberty in the case of Congress Representative Crispin Beltran. Amnesty International urges the Government of the Philippines:
To
respond and take action to resolve the concerns of the IPU;
To ensure that Congressional
Representatives and all others accused of rebellion are not subjected to arbitrary or prolonged deprivations of liberty before
the basis of allegations put forward by the police can be fully and independently scrutinised by the courts. All such suspects
must be afforded in full their rights to due process and a fair trial.
Appendix 1: 14-point Program for the Prevention
of Extrajudicial Executions
Adopted by Amnesty International in 1992
Extrajudicial executions are fundamental violations
of human rights and an affront to the conscience of humanity. These unlawful and deliberate killings, carried out by order
of a government or with its complicity or acquiescence, have been condemned by the United Nations. Yet extrajudicial executions
continue, daily and across the globe.
Many of the victims have been taken into custody
or made to "disappear" before being killed. Some are killed in their homes, or in the course of military operations. Some
are assassinated by uniformed members of the security forces, or by "death squads" operating with official connivance. Others
are killed in peaceful demonstrations.
The accountability of governments for extrajudicial
executions is not diminished by the commission of similar abhorrent acts by armed opposition groups. Urgent action is needed
to stop extrajudicial executions and bring those responsible to justice.
Amnesty International calls on all governments
to implement the following 14-Point Program for the Prevention of Extrajudicial Executions. It invites concerned individuals
and organizations to join in promoting the program. Amnesty International believes that the implementation of these measures
is a positive indication of a government's commitment to stop extrajudicial executions and to work for their eradication worldwide.
1. Official condemnation
The highest authorities of every country should
demonstrate their total opposition to extrajudicial executions. They should make clear to all members of the police, military
and other security forces that extrajudicial executions will not be tolerated under any circumstances.
2. Chain-of-command control
Those in charge of the security forces should
maintain strict chain-of-command control to ensure that officers under their command do not commit extrajudicial executions.
Officials with chain-of-command responsibility who order or tolerate extrajudicial executions by those under their command
should be held criminally responsible for these acts.
3. Restraints on use of force
Governments should ensure that law enforcement
officials use force only when strictly necessary and only to the minimum extent required under the circumstances. Lethal force
should not be used except when strictly unavoidable in order to protect life.
4. Action against "death squads"
"Death squads", private armies, criminal gangs
and paramilitary forces operating outside the chain of command but with official support or acquiescence should be prohibited
and disbanded. Members of such groups who have perpetrated extrajudicial executions should be brought to justice.
5. Protection against death threats
Governments should ensure that anyone in danger
of extrajudicial execution, including those who receive death threats, is effectively protected.
6. No secret detention
Governments should ensure that prisoners are
held only in publicly recognized places of detention and that accurate information about the arrest and detention of any prisoner
is made available promptly to relatives, lawyers and the courts. No one should be secretly detained.
7. Access to prisoners
All prisoners should be brought before a judicial
authority without delay after being taken into custody. Relatives, lawyers and doctors should have prompt and regular access
to them. There should be regular, independent, unannounced and unrestricted visits of inspection to all places of detention.
8. Prohibition in law
Governments should ensure that the commission
of an extrajudicial execution is a criminal offence, punishable by sanctions commensurate with the gravity of the practice.
The prohibition of extrajudicial executions and the essential safeguards for their prevention must not be suspended under
any circumstances, including states of war or other public emergency.
9. Individual responsibility
The prohibition of extrajudicial executions
should be reflected in the training of all officials involved in the arrest and custody of prisoners and all officials authorized
to use lethal force, and in the instructions issued to them. These officials should be instructed that they have the right
and duty to refuse to obey any order to participate in an extrajudicial execution. An order from a superior officer or a public
authority must never be invoked as a justification for taking part in an extrajudicial execution.
10. Investigation
Governments should ensure that all complaints
and reports of extrajudicial executions are investigated promptly, impartially and effectively by a body which is independent
of those allegedly responsible and has the necessary powers and resources to carry out the investigation. The methods and
findings of the investigation should be made public. The body of the alleged victim should not be disposed of until an adequate
autopsy has been conducted by a suitably qualified doctor who is able to function impartially. Officials suspected of responsibility
for extrajudicial executions should be suspended from active duty during the investigation. Relatives of the victim should
have access to information relevant to the investigation, should be entitled to appoint their own doctor to carry out or be
present at an autopsy, and should be entitled to present evidence. Complainants, witnesses, lawyers, judges and others involved
in the investigation should be protected from intimidation and reprisals.
11. Prosecution
Governments should ensure that those responsible
for extrajudicial executions are brought to justice. This principle should apply wherever such people happen to be, wherever
the crime was committed, whatever the nationality of the perpetrators or victims and no matter how much time has elapsed since
the commission of the crime. Trials should be in the civilian courts. The perpetrators should not be allowed to benefit from
any legal measures exempting them from criminal prosecution or conviction.
12. Compensation
Dependants of victims of extrajudicial execution
should be entitled to obtain fair and adequate redress from the state, including financial compensation.
13. Ratification of human rights treaties and implementation of international standards
All governments should ratify international
treaties containing safeguards and remedies against extrajudicial executions, including the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights and its first Optional Protocol which provides for individual complaints. Governments should ensure full
implementation of the relevant provisions of these and other international instruments, including the UN Principles on the
Effective Prevention and Investigation of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions, and comply with the recommendations
of intergovernmental organizations concerning these abuses.
14. International responsibility
Governments should use all available channels
to intercede with the governments of countries where extrajudicial executions have been reported. They should ensure that
transfers of equipment, know-how and training for military, security or police use do not facilitate extrajudicial executions.
No one should be forcibly returned to a country where he or she risks becoming a victim of extrajudicial execution.
Appendix 2: Arbitrary arrest and detention:
safeguards and abuse
Legal protections
In the Philippines, a primary safeguard underpinning
the right not to be subjected to arbitrary arrest is the general rule that a person can only be arrested with a warrant issued
by a judge upon a finding of probable cause.(128) This rule allows a judicial officer, independent of the executive arm of
government and law enforcement agencies, to exercise oversight, impartially assessing the grounds for an arrest, and maintaining
a degree of scrutiny over the detention and any other subsequent investigation.
As detailed in the Rules on Criminal Procedure,
for a judge to issue an arrest warrant the most common procedure would be for an investigating public prosecutor (Fiscal)(129)
to conduct a Preliminary Investigation(130) to assess evidence, including the complaint lodged by the offended party or police,
any related police investigation reports or witness affidavits and the counter-affidavits of the accused, in order to ascertain
if an offence has probably been committed by the accused.
In the course of a preliminary investigation,
the investigating prosecutor has ten days after the filing of a complaint either to dismiss it, or to request counter-affidavits
and other documents from the respondent (who is required to reply within ten days).(131) After assessing the written evidence
provided and personally examining the complainant and his/her witnesses, the investigating prosecutor, on finding probable
cause, must prepare a resolution and accompanying Complaint or Information.(132) Within five days the investigating prosecutor
is required to send it for approval by superior officers – the Provincial or City Prosecutor, or the Chief State Prosecutor.
These officials are then required to take action on the case, including sending the Information for filing in Court, within
ten days. On receipt of the approved Information, the Court then has a period of ten days within which to issue a warrant
for the arrest of the accused, or to dismiss the Information.(133)
Lawful arrest without a warrant
However the safeguards preceding the issue of
a warrant of arrest, afforded by judicial oversight of the findings of the preliminary investigation, are not absolute. They
can be circumvented by legal provisions that allow arrest without warrant in certain defined circumstances, and by jurisprudence
that has interpreted certain crimes, including rebellion, as "continuing offences".(134)
Under
Rule 113 (Section 5) of the Rules on Criminal Procedure, an arrest without a warrant by an officer or a private person is
lawful:
(a) When, in his
presence, the person to be arrested has committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to commit an offence;
(b) When an offence
has in fact just been committed, and he has personal knowledge of facts indicating that the person to be arrested had committed
it…
It
is the abuse of this provision which facilitates arbitrary arrests in the Philippines.
Amnesty International is concerned that the use of warrantless arrests is extensive and that many of these arrests are unlawful
– in that they are not effected as, or immediately after, a crime is committed.
The inquest procedure
By law, when a suspect is arrested without a
court warrant, he must be taken to the nearest police station or jail and, following a summary Inquest Procedure,(135) an
Information must filed in court within a maximum of 36 hours (depending on the seriousness of the offence).(136) This limited
period of police custody can only be extended if the suspect signs a waiver(137) and requests a preliminary investigation.
In theory, the Inquest provides an opportunity
for the prosecutor, in the presence of the detainee’s lawyer, to determine the lawfulness of the arrest, whether counsel
had been present during interrogation, what the physical condition of the arrested person is and whether any torture and ill-treatment
may have been used to coerce any admission or confession.
However it is not always clear that the Inquest
prosecutors (fiscals) have the requisite independence to act as a proper judicial authority, and the proceeding consist of
a cursory assessment of evidence on paper and become a semi-automatic mechanism for the filing of charges. Amnesty International
is concerned that the Inquest therefore can fail to uphold the right to have a judge or other officer "exercise judicial power"
where a detained person is brought before him or her, as set out in Article 9(3) of the ICCPR(138) and other international
standards.(139)
In addition, there is a widespread assumption
among police and prosecutors that, following the Inquest, the physical filing of an information with a Clerk of Court within
36 hours of arrest does indeed represent the fulfilment of detainee’s right to be brought promptly before a ‘judicial
authority’. However the organisation is concerned that, in addition to the failure by fiscals to exercise a proper judicial
role during the inquest itself, the actual filing of the information at the court is not an occasion for the exercise of genuine
judicial oversight – but little more than the lodging of paper documentation.
Appendix 3: Additional case studies
1. Eden
Marcellana and Eddie Gumanoy
Eden Marcellana, aged 31 years old and the mother
of two children, and Eddie Gumanoy, aged 37 years old, were abducted by unidentified armed men in the evening on 21 April
2003 in Barangay Maibon, Naujan, Mindoro Oriental. They were travelling in a van with nine fellow members of a Karapatan
human rights "quick-reaction" fact-finding team to investigate reports of a pattern of political killings and abductions in
the province when about twenty armed men most wearing "bonnet" face masks, wearing combat fatigue jackets and ammunition pouches,
blocked the road with their jeepney.
At least five of the masked assailants took
over the van drove it to a nearby village followed by the jeepney carrying the other gunmen. The assailants then man-handled,
struck and verbally abused the human rights workers demanding that Eden Marcellana identify herself. Eden Marcellana, Eddie
Gumanoy and three other members of the team were then taken away on the jeepney. All the possessions of the fact-finding team,
including documents and photographs collected on their mission, were taken. The following day the bodies of Eden and Eddie
were found in a bamboo grove near a highway. The three other abductees had been released in separate isolated locations.
Post-mortem examinations by the Philippine Commission
on Human Rights found that they were "hog-tied" (hands and feet tied together) and bore signs of torture inflicted before
they were killed. Eddie Gumanoy suffered gunshot wounds to his face and chest and Eden Marcellana had two stab marks in the
face and upper back. Other sources reported that Eden Marcellana’s body was severely beaten, particularly on the face
and neck.
Eden Marcellana was the Secretary General of
Karapatan-Southern Tagalog region and Eddie Gumanoy was the Chairperson of Kasama-TK, a local peasants organization.
In the months prior to the abduction Eden Marcellana had publicly expressed concern about the at least 27 reported political
killings, abductions and harassment of leftists and alleged "communist sympathizers" in Mindoro Oriental allegedly carried
out by a "vigilante" group linked to members of the 204th Infantry Brigade, which was under the command of Colonel Jovito
Palparan. A criminal complaint was filed against Colonel Palparan in relation to one case, and it was reported that he had
subsequently labelled Eden Marcellana as a "terrorist". In the days before their abduction, the fact-finding team reported
that they were under military surveillance and when outside the 204th Brigade headquarters had reportedly been told to enter
and were photographed against their will.
The killings of Eden Marcellana and Eddie Gumanoy
prompted extensive media coverage and President Arroyo called for the establishment of a special task force under the direction
of the Undersecretary of Justice to conduct immediate investigations. The task force announced that there were "strong indications"
that soldiers were involved in the abduction. Other investigations were undertaken by the local police, the National Bureau
of Investigation (NBI) and the military. In addition the human rights committees of both the Senate and the House of Representatives
agreed to hold hearings in May to examine the case, but were unable to resolve matters. Colonel Palparan was temporarily transferred
from his post to another province pending the outcome of investigations.
In June it was reported that witnesses to the
abduction had identified one of at least four suspects, a Sergeant working as an intelligence officer with the 204th Infantry
Brigade, from pictures shown to them by the Department of Justice and NBI. The Sergeant was arrested by the NBI in Manila on an unrelated criminal complaint but was later released on
bail due to the absence of formal charges against him. Witnesses identified other suspects as former NPA members ("rebel returnees")
who were believed to be working with the army as operatives or "military assets".
The Department of Justice preliminary investigation
hearings in the complaints against the Sergeant were repeatedly postponed as he failed to present counter-affidavits to the
witness statements. In October, accompanied by Colonel Palparan, he submitted an affidavit to the prosecutor stating that
he had an alibi, supported by a witness, and that he was not in Mindoro Oriental at the time of the killings. In February
2004, prosecutors dismissed the complaints and did not file charges against the Sergeant. An appeal against their decision
was filed and remains pending in 2006.
In July 2003 relatives and witnesses filed a
complaint against Colonel Palparan with the Philippine Commission on Human Rights in relation to the case. The Commission
conducted investigations, but in February 2004 the families and witnesses, stating that they had lost confidence in the effectiveness
and powers of the Commission, refused further participation in its inquiries and withdrew their complaints.
In a subsequent resolution the Commission on
Human Rights, while not able to reach definitive findings as to the identity of the killers and to recommend the filing of
appropriate criminal charges, expressed grave concern that Colonel Palparan had failed to initiate investigations into the
killings, especially as his unit and personnel under his command were alleged to be complicit in the killings, and that he
had not strictly implemented AFP Rules of Engagement for Internal Security Operations, including requirements to respect human
rights and maintain chain of command responsibility and control. The Commission also expressed concern that the Congressional
Commission on Appointments had approved Colonel Palparan’s promotion to Brigadier General despite its withdrawal of
a required certification that the officer in question has no human rights complaints pending or resolved against him.
The killing of Eden Marcellana and Eddie Gumanoy
remained unresolved. In March 2006 relatives of Eddie Gumanoy lodged a complaint with the UN Human Rights Committee under
the Optional Protocol of the ICCPR. Their complaint stated that even if formal domestic legal remedies may appear not to have
been fully exhausted, prolonged delays and ineffective procedures meant that, in reality, their right to a remedy and to receive
justice had been denied.
2. Jose "Pepe" Manegded
Jose "Pepe" Manegded, aged 37 years and married
with two daughters, was killed at around 10:00 in the evening on 28 November, 2005. He was found dead near a waiting shed
along the national highway at Barangay Apatot, San Esteban, Ilocos Sur, Luzon, where he had been preparing to catch a bus
to Manila to meet his wife on her return from Hong Kong.
About 30 minutes earlier he taken a tricycle
from a nearby resort hotel where he had participated as a speaker and trainer at a paralegal training seminar organized by
the Ilocos Human Rights Alliance and Karapatan. As he waited near the highway for a bus, a van reportedly approached
and an unidentified man alighted. After speaking on his cell phone, the man reportedly drew a pistol and, when Pepe Manegded
began to flee, chased him and opened fire. The tricycle driver and sole known witness after seeing the man chase Pepe and,
on hearing the shots, returned in fear to the resort to seek assistance to call the police. The autopsy report stated that
Pepe Manegded was shot with a .45 semi-automatic pistol and suffered over 20 gunshot wounds.
A church worker and community activist, Pepe
Manegded was a coordinator of the Rural Missionaries of the Philippines (Cordillera and Ilocos), a former coordinator of the
Regional Ecumenical Council in the Cordilleras and an editorial staff member of ‘Writing on The Wall’- the official
publication of the Northern Luzon Forum for Church and Society. Earlier in 2005, Pepe Manegded had also agreed to take over
the duties of Bayan Muna coordinator in the Ilocos region following the killing by unidentified armed men of former
Bayan Muna coordinator, Romeo "Romy" Sanchez, in March 2005 (see case study).
According to reports compiled by Karapatan,
Pepe Manegded had received death threats on his cell phone prior to his killing. It was also reported that he was under surveillance
and that the military had labelled him as an NPA supporter.
Initial investigations carried out by police
in Ilocos Sur found that the victim’s body was found about 15 meters from the waiting area, and collected various items
from the crime scene, including a shell cases and a cloth case for a rifle. The initial police report concluded that the killing
stemmed from the victim’s "personal activities and transactions", but recommended the establishment of a task force
to conduct further investigations. Amid concerns at the thoroughness of the investigation, colleagues from the participants
from the paralegal training recalled that they had found the victim’s remains approximately 40 meters from the waiting
shed, in a grassy area below a dirt road, and that it appeared as of someone had attempted to hide the body.
In February 2006, the Asian Human Rights Commission
reported that in response to its expressions of concern about the case, the Office of the Ombudsman for the Military and Other
Law Enforcement Offices has started investigations into Pepe Manegdeg’s case and three others. In addition the Secretary
of Justice informed the AHRC that he instructed the National Bureau of Investigation to commence an investigation. However,
there are no reports of any suspects being arrested or charged, and the case is believed to remain unresolved.
3. Romeo "Romy" Sanchez
Romeo "Romy" Sanchez, aged 39 years, married
with five children, was attacked and killed at around 5:00 in the afternoon on 9 March 2005 in the centre of Baguio City, Luzon. He
had been walking down one of the city’s main streets with two companions and stopped at the public market to look at
second-hand clothes when he was shot in the head at close range. His companions, on hearing a bang, looked round to see Romy
Sanchez slumped on the ground. They stayed at the scene in a state of shock until the police arrived.
Romy Sanchez, Ilocos regional coordinator of
Bayan Muna and regional secretary-general of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN – New Patriotic Alliance),
was a well-known local radio presenter and commentator and a community activist working on behalf on peasant and fisher folk
in the Ilocos region. In 2000 he had been detained in Rizal province and reportedly subjected to torture by military intelligence
officers who accused of involvement in the killing of a former senior CPP-NPA leader Conrado Balweg in 1999.(140)
Reports collated by the Cordillera Human Rights
Alliance describe how two police officers, who were on foot patrol, arrived at the crime scene after only five minutes. A
subsequent police scene-of-crime operation was able to recover one fired cartridge for a .380 calibre firearm on the floor
on a nearby pawnshop. An autopsy report stated that the victim was shot with a .380 calibre handgun at close range below his
left ear.
Romy Sanchez’ wife described her husband
had received threatening text messages prior to his death including one warning that he should "prepare to be the next to
die". He reportedly told colleagues that he had be under military surveillance on numerous occasions since his detention in
2000 and that soldiers had threatened to harm him if he did not stop his leftist activities.
Initial investigations by the Baguio police centred on a witness who claimed to have seen the perpetrator talking to the
victim. This witness, who refused give his identify for fear of retaliation, gave a description of the alleged assailant for
a police cartographic sketch. At this stage police cited possible motives for the attack as factional rivalries within Bayan
Muna; rivalries between the "rejectionist" and "reaffirmist" factions on the CPP-NPA; retribution for the victim’s
alleged involvement in the killing of Conrado Balweg; or a personal grudge caused by financial misconduct by the victim. A
text message to a local radio station reportedly from a NPA breakaway faction,(141) which had signed a truce with the government
in 2000 and whose members at times allegedly acted as military "assets", claimed responsibility for the killing. Other sources
claimed that military intelligence personnel were involved.
Subsequently another witness came forward and
voluntarily signed a written statement stating that he saw a man he knew at the crime scene shortly before the shooting. Although
no one reportedly saw the attack itself, this witness claimed he saw this man hurriedly walking away from the market afterwards
with two companions, and insert a gun into his jacket. The witness stated that he met this man by chance the next day and
on inquiring about the shooting incident was warned by him to keep silent.
The police, having filed the investigation report
with the city prosecutor, considered the case as "solved". Charges were later filed against the man identified by the witness,
but the suspect is reported not to have been arrested. In June 2006 Task Force Usig restated that the case was believed to
have been a result of rivalries between "rejectionist" and "reaffirmist" factions of the CPP-NPA. No information about any
charges or legal proceedings is unknown to Amnesty International and the case remains unresolved.
4. Audie Lucero
Audie Lucero, aged 19 years old, was found dead
in a rice field in Barangay Capitangan, Abucay, Bataan, Luzon on 13 February, 2006. According
to an autopsy report he was killed by three gunshot wounds to his back, knee and left hand, and his body showed signs of ill-treatment.
Audie Lucero was an active member of the local
youth chapter of Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokrasya (KPD - Movement for National Democracy) in Samal, Bataan. The previous year, in February 2005, he participated in a meeting with local officials and military
and police commanders in Samal in which representatives of various sectoral groups voiced their opposition to plans to station
a detachment of soldiers from the 24th Infantry Battalion in the area.
According to reports collated by a fact-finding
mission to the region conducted by Task Force Detainees of the Philippines and other human rights groups, Audie Lucero had
been particularly vocal in this meeting and reportedly prompted a heated response from the police commander, who suggested
that the youth group was linked to the armed insurgency and stated, "We know what the Youth for National Democracy is. We
know who is backing you. We know all of you".
Following the meeting the military detachment
was established in the area, conducting regular night patrols and other duties. Another dialogue between local sectoral groups
and the police took place in September 2005, in which Audie Lucero was again considered to be the spokesperson of the youth
group and, as such, was known to take a prominent role in organising periodic peaceful protest activities.
On 12 February 2006, Audie and two companions
brought a wounded friend to the hospital in Balanga City. As Audie and one other companion waited outside the hospital at around 5.00 pm
for relatives of the patient to arrive, a police patrol encountered them and began to ask them about the patient. It is reported
that the police suspected that the patient was an insurgent, who may have been wounded in a clash with the military. At around
7.00 pm Audie was left alone with the police officers, believed to be from the Balanga and Lubao police stations, after his
companion was asked by a nurse to collect blood supplies for the patient.
The patient’s wife arrived at the hospital
at around 8.00 pm. She and other witnesses described seeing a military truck and at least ten soldiers at the hospital, believed
to be from the 24th Infantry Brigade. One soldier questioned the wife about her husband and asked, after pointing him out,
whether she know Audie. The wife described Audie, accompanied by soldiers, as looking frightened and apparently crying. She
told the soldier that she knew nothing about him, beyond that he had helped her husband to come to the hospital. The wife
reported that police and soldiers were no longer in the hospital when she left to collect blood supplies at around 11.00 pm.
Audie Lucero was found dead the next day in
a field about six kilometres from the hospital. According to local human rights groups, no information about the progress
of police investigations has been made public and the case remains unresolved.
Appendix 4: Reported political killings in
2006 (January to June)
No. |
Name |
Affiliation |
Date of incident |
1 |
Armando Leabres |
Bayan Muna
|
10/01/06 |
2 |
Ysrael Bernos
|
Town mayor |
13/01/06 |
3 |
Ofelia "Nanay
Perla" Rodriguez |
Peasant rights
leader |
16/01/06 |
4 |
Antonio Alde |
Bayan Muna
|
16/01/06 |
5 |
Rolly Canete |
Radio journalist
and legislative spokesperson |
20/01/06 |
6 |
Graciano Aquino
|
Newspaper journalist |
21/01/06 |
7 |
Mateo Morales
|
Activist working
with indigenous communities |
24/01/06 |
8 |
Roberto de la
Cruz |
Union board member |
25/01/06 |
9 |
Audie Lucero |
Youth activist
with KPD |
13/02/06 |
10 |
Melanio Evangelista |
Leader in peasant
organization |
17/02/06 |
11 |
Jensen Cristobal |
Bayan Muna and local government officer |
18/02/06 |
12 |
Napoleon Pornadoro |
Former Secretary
General of Karapatan-Quezon and Anakpawis-Quezon |
27/02/06 |
13 |
Luis Anthony
Biel III |
City mayor |
03/03/06 |
14 |
Arturo Caloza |
Bayan Muna |
04/03/06 |
15 |
Nestor Arinque |
Leader in peasant
organization |
07/03/06 |
16 |
Santiago Teodoro |
BAYAN |
10/03/06 |
17 |
Tirso Cruz |
Union leader
of farmers |
17/03/06 |
18 |
Cris Hugo |
League of Filipino
Students |
19/03/06 |
19 |
Agnes Abelon |
Wife of Amante
Abelon, coordinator Anakpawis |
20/03/06 |
20 |
Amante Abelon
Jr. |
Son of Agnes
Abelon and Amante Abelon Sr. |
20/03/06 |
21 |
Vicente Denila |
Agrarian reform
advocate |
27/03/06 |
22 |
Liezelda Estorba-Cunado |
Gabriela Women’s
Party |
03/04/06 |
23 |
Florencio Perez
Cervantes |
Peasant, local
village council member |
05/04/06 |
24 |
Elpidio de la
Victoria |
Director of an
environmental commission |
12/04/06 |
25 |
Rico Adeva |
Community organiser
of peasant and agrarian reform group, Task Force Mapalad |
15/04/06 |
26 |
Marilou Rubio-Sanchez |
Bayan Muna |
22/04/06 |
27 |
Virgilio Rubio |
Bayan Muna |
22/04/06 |
28 |
‘Tatay’
Porferio Maglasang |
Local chairperson
of peasant organisation |
22/04/06 |
29 |
Porferio Maglasang
Sr. |
Local chairperson
of peasant organization |
22/04/06 |
30 |
Enrico Cabanit |
Activist for
agrarian reform |
24/04/06 |
31 |
Jesus Talaboc |
Farmer |
08/05/06 |
32 |
Rev. Jemias Tinambacan |
United Church of Christ in the Philippines; Promotion of Church Peoples’ Response and Bayan Muna.
|
09/05/06 |
33 |
Elena "Baby"
Mendiola |
Local Secretary
General of Bayan Muna. |
10/05/06 |
34 |
Ric Balauag |
Bayan Muna.
|
10/05/06 |
35 |
Manuel Nardo |
Bayan Muna
|
|
36 |
Pedro Angcon |
Anakbayan
|
16/05/06 |
37 |
Jose Doton |
United Church of Christ in the Philippines |
16/05/06 |
38 |
Mario Domingo |
Local leader
of peasant and agrarian reform group, Task Force Mapalad |
17/05/06 |
39 |
Annaliza Abandaor-Gandia |
Activist with
Kaisa Ka, a women’s group of KPD |
18/05/06 |
40 |
Rev. Andy Pawican |
United Church of Christ in the Philippines |
21/05/06 |
41 |
Noel ‘Noli’
Capulong |
United Church of Christ in the Philippines |
27/05/06 |
42 |
David Costuna |
Activist for
agrarian rights |
04/06/06 |
43 |
Arcadio Macale |
A friend of Costuna |
04/06/06 |
44 |
Rafael Markus
Bangit |
Cordillera Peoples
Alliance and provincial leader of Bayan Muna |
08/06/06 |
45 |
Tito Marata |
Activist with
a peasant organization and Rural Missionaries of the Philippines |
17/06/06 |
46 |
George Vigo |
Development worker
and journalist. |
19/06/06 |
47 |
Maricel ‘Macel’
Vigo |
Development worker
and journalist. |
19/06/06 |
48 |
Eladio ‘Jazz’
Dasi |
Karapatan
and Bayan Muna |
20/06/06 |
49 |
Wilfredo Cornea |
Local leader
of peasant and agrarian reform group, Task Force Mapalad |
26/06/06 |
50 |
Delfinito Albano |
City mayor |
27/06/06 |
********
(1) In the Philippines, the terms "the left" or "leftists" encompass a broad range of political
meaning. Terms commonly used to differentiate groups within this spectrum include "rebels" or "guerrillas" for members of
communist revolutionary armed groups; "militants" for various mass-based unarmed people’s organisations; "progressives"
for members of left-leaning political parties; and "cause-orientated groups" for various left-leaning sectoral (urban poor,
peasants, workers etc.) non-governmental organizations working on social justice issues.
(2) Including the Philippine Commission on Human
Rights, the Integrated Bar of the Philippines, Sulong CARHRIHL and the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP),
whose President, Archbishop Angel Lagdameo, expressed concern over killings or "executions without trial" of "leftist-militants"
and "defenders of the poor suspected as communists", stating: "Whoever are the perpetrators, and whatever is the cause, the
victims - irrespective of any ideology they profess - are still subjects of human rights and are entitled to due process in
an unbiased court" ("Let Us Keep Human Life Sacred", www.cbcponline.net, 31 May 2006). The CBCP reiterated these concerns
in a Pastoral Letter on Social Concerns issued on 9 July 2006, which "denounced the increasing number of extra-judicial killings
of journalists and social activists suspected as sympathizers of insurgents allegedly by some ultra-rightist elements in the
military". The CBCP also denounced reported killings allegedly perpetrated by insurgents, for reasons including failures to
pay "revolutionary tax", and emphasised that: "The defence of human rights and of human dignity must itself be just. It has
to be impartial, irrespective of religious belief or ideology" (www.cpbconline.net).
(3) Including the Asian Human Rights Commission,
the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, Reporters Sans Frontieres, the World Council of Churches and Amnesty
International.
(4) ‘Impunity’ literally means exemption
from punishment. In this context it refers to the failure of the state to redress human rights violations by bringing suspected
perpetrators to justice in accordance with international human rights standards and otherwise repair the harm suffered by
the victims.
(5) Amnesty International defines "extrajudicial
executions" as unlawful and deliberate killings carried out by order of a government or with its complicity or acquiescence.
Extrajudicial executions are carried out by regular military or police forces, by special units created to function without
normal supervision, or by civilian agents working with government forces or with its complicity. Such government forces, units
or agents are often called "death squads". This is in contrast to non-political criminal murders, or to politically motivated
"unlawful killings" carried out by non-state actors, including members of armed groups, without the complicity or acquiescence
of a government.
(6) Human Rights Committee, general comment
No. 31, "Nature of the legal obligation on States Parties to the Covenant", UN Doc. CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13 (2004), para. 15.
(7) Philippine Commission on Human Rights chairperson
Purificacion Quisumbing reported in Philippine Daily Inquirer (PDI), 23 May 2006: "We strongly condemn the spate of killings
that have yet to be resolved and we have noted that there is a perceived pattern of the violation of the human right to life…
If several deaths happened in just a week, this constitutes a pattern of impunity. In human rights terms, the government is
still responsible even if persons in authority are not those behind the killings… [T]he government is still responsible
in protecting the right to life". Responding to the continued killings and slow pace of investigations, "We couldn’t
care less what [political] colours the killers are. Is the government so helpless?"
(8) In an apparent policy shift, President Arroyo
announced that an existing 10 year government timetable for suppressing the communist insurgency should be reduced to two
years in areas of Luzon, and that one billion peso (US$19 million) extra funds would be allocated to the military and police
to contribute to this process (PDI, 18 June 2006).
(9) Amnesty International, Public Statement
on 8 March 2006: Philippines: Time to reassert the need for respect for
human rights as State of Emergency is lifted (ASA 35/002/2006).
(10) Referring to party-list leaders, Major
General Jovito Palparan reportedly stated "…even though they’re in government [as Congress Representatives], no
matter what appearance they take, they are still enemies of the state" (PDI, 16 May 2006).
(11) Amnesty International Report 2006. See
Appendix 4: Political killings in 2006 (January to June).
(12) "In the harshest terms I condemn political
killings. We together stopped judicial executions with the abolition of the death penalty. We urge witnesses to come forward.
Together we will stop extrajudicial executions". Referring to counter-insurgency operations President Arroyo stated, "...we
will end the long oppression of barangays [villages] by rebel terrorists who kill without qualms, even their own. In those
regions under the supervision of the 7th [Infantry] Division, [Major General] Jovito Palparan is battling the enemy. He will
not back down until the communities emerge from the night and rise towards the dawn of justice and freedom." (State of the
Nation Address, 24 July 2006).
(13) President Arroyo reportedly instructed
cabinet security committee officials to put a stop to the killings involving leftist activists and journalists and to investigate
and account for them (Philippine Star, 25 May 2006).
(14) (ABS-CBN, 17 June 2006).
(15) See Appendix 1.
(16) Ferdinand Marcos’ presidency (1965-86),
notably the period of martial law (1972-84), was marked by endemic human rights violations. See: Report of an Amnesty International
Mission to the Philippines in Nov. 1975 (PUB 64/00/77, 2nd edition); Report
of an Amnesty International Mission to the Philippines
in Nov. 1981 (ASA 35/25/82); and Incommunicado detention, ill-treatment and torture during 1988 (ASA 35/40/88).
(17) National Unification Commission Report
to President Fidel Ramos on the pursuit of a comprehensive peace process, 1993.
(18) Paramilitary units, outside formal military
command, were responsible for large-scale human rights violations under President Marcos and were banned in 1987. Immediately
afterwards a national militia, comprised of Citizen Armed Forces Geographical Units’ (CAFGUs), was instituted. Although
under AFP command, local CAFGUs were often badly trained and undisciplined and at times engaged in local feuds. They rapidly
gained a reputation similar to the former paramilitaries as being responsible for large-scale human rights violations.
(19) Amnesty International report: The Killing
Goes On (ASA 35/01/92, 1992).
(20) In the late 1980s, the CPP-NPA was estimated
to comprise some 22,000 armed insurgents, with a presence in over 55 of the country’s 73 provinces.
(21) Robert Garcia Francis, To Suffer Thy Comrades
(Anvil Publishing, 2002).
(22) In a July 2006 Pastoral Letter (see n.2)
the Catholic Bishop’s Conference of the Philippines expressed concern at continued reports of the killing of civilians
by the NPA, including within the context of NPA raids to seize weapons; in response to failures to pay "revolutionary tax";
or as an imposition of "revolutionary justice" ("blood-debt to the people").
(23) Though the repeal of the Anti-Subversion
Act (RA 1700) in 1992 was a significant factor in encouraging negotiations with the now legalised CPP, some senior AFP officers
maintained the position, repeated in 2006, that CPP membership was tantamount to being a "co-conspirator" with the NPA and
therefore a criminal act.
(24) Areas in provinces or districts where AFP
counter-insurgency operations were stepped up to counter a perceived NPA threat. Direct military ‘encounters’
(clashes) between AFP regulars and Citizen Armed Forces Geographical Units (CAFGU) and NPA guerrillas would often be accompanied
by "zoning", in which villages were surrounded and searches and arrests effected, and "saturation drives" when large numbers
of troops or police would deploy together into a community, step up " intelligence-gathering" and effect mass arrests.
(25) The National Democratic Front, an alliance
or "united front" of revolutionary groups including the CPP, the NPA and sectoral organizations (e.g. peasants, workers, women,
indigenous people), represents these groups in negotiations with the government. The NDF’s chief political consultant
is Jose Maria Sison, the founder of the CPP-NPA.
(26) The Royal Norwegian Government extended
support to the peace process as third party facilitators for the negotiations.
(27) The CARHRIHL, as a first stage, was envisaged
to lead on to further negotiations and Agreements on Social and Economic Reforms, on Political and Constitutional Reforms
and finally, on the End of Hostilities and the Disposition of Forces.
(28) The post-9/11 (2001) US-led global "war on terror", within which the Philippines
is seen an important US regional ally,
influenced the government’s anti-insurgency approach. In January 2002 a new five-year anti-insurgency plan, Operation
Bantay-Laya (Freedom Watch) took effect. In August 2002 President Arroyo issued a "Nine Point Guideline on the CPP" which
emphasised the "terrorist" acts of the CPP-NPA and welcomed the US
terrorist listing. Following an August 2002 order for a redeployment of the AFP against the NPA, the government appeared increasingly
to place military counter-insurgency operations over the peace process. This approach became explicit during and after the
2006 State of Emergency. In June 2006 President Arroyo and
other officials called for "all-out war" to crush the CPP-NPA within two years.
(29) Under 1995 legislation a system of proportional
representation was introduced whereby, in addition to voting directly for individual district representative for Congress,
electors can vote for a "party-list" for which twenty percent of the 260 House of Representatives seats are reserved. Every
2% of total party-list votes cast nationally gains a seat in the House, with each party allowed a maximum of three seats.
(30) The 1995 Joint Agreement on Safety and
Immunity Guarantees was adopted, following a series of difficult GRP-NDF talks, to promote peace negotiations, create an atmosphere
conducive to free discussion and free movement during such negotiations and to avert incidents that might jeopardize the peace
process. The Agreement covered listed NDF negotiating panel members, consultants and other personnel involved in the peace
negotiations.
(31) As of May 2006, 693 complaints had reportedly
been filed against GRP forces and 106 complaints against NDF forces (PDI, 8 June 2006).
(32) Akbayan (Citizen’s Action Party)
a left-leaning party-list group separate from the CCP and its party-list political allies, complained that a number of its
organizers and supporters were killed or threatened with assassination by the NPA in various provinces between 2003-5, reportedly
in the context of electoral rivalries and local land disputes.
(33) Under Article 7(18) the Philippine Constitution
(1987), the President is authorised to declare a state of national emergency and command the army "to prevent or suppress
lawless violence, invasion or rebellion." The State of Emergency
was lifted after a week as the authorities announced that the reported coup threat had eased. However officials warned that
the emergency would be re-imposed if considered necessary and concerns over continued restrictions on the rights of expression
and peaceful assembly remained.
(34) Philippine Star, 25 February 2006; PDI,
28 February 2006.
(35) Proclamation 1017, Proclamation Declaring
a State of National Emergency, 24 February 2006.
(36) In May 2006 the Supreme Court ruled on
a petition challenging the constitutionality of the President’s declaration of a State of Emergency. The Court found that while the declaration was constitutional in that it called
on the AFP to prevent and suppress lawless violence, specific provisions of the declaration that ordered the AFP to enforce
laws not related to lawless violence (such as those affecting media freedoms and peaceful assembly) were unconstitutional.
(37) At least sixteen opposition figures, including
six leftist Congress Representatives, were charged with rebellion during March 2006. Among those charged was a right-wing
former army colonel and ex-senator, Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan, who had been involved in a series of coup attempts since 1986.
(38) AFP briefing presentation, Knowing the
Enemy: Are we missing the point? (2005). The briefing listed non-governmental organizations (NGOs) infiltrated or targeted
for infiltration by the CPP-NPA, including the Social Action Centres of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines
and the National Union of Journalists. In response to criticism senior officials reportedly stated subsequently that the briefing
had not been authorised, and did not reflect official AFP policy.
(39) The list also contained at least seven
rightist leaders and former or serving soldiers suspected of planning a coup attempt with leftists. It also listed unnamed
suspects as "Jane and John Does" raising concerns that complaint may be used to justify the arrests of an unspecified number
of potential suspects, as yet unidentified by the police.
(40) The Secretariat serves the Joint Monitoring
Committee, which comprises both the government and NDF monitoring committees. The secretariat is funded by the Royal Norwegian
Government as part of their role as third party facilitators of the peace negotiations.
(41) Government officials reportedly reiterated
that formal peace negotiations with the NDF could not be resumed without a ceasefire agreement, but that informal talks with
CPP-NPA leaders at the local level was possible (PDI, 5 July 2006).
(42) See n.23.
(43) "Make communism illegal again" (PDI, 21
May 2006); "I want communism totally erased" (Philippine Star, 21 May 2006).
(44) See n.8.
(45) Justice Secretary Raul Gonzalez accused
Senator Maria Ana Consuelo Madrigal of "treason" and warned she could be prosecuted for holding unauthorized talks with NDF
leaders in Utrecht, Netherlands
(PDI, 5 July 2006).
(46) Amando Doronila, "Killings show military
influence in Arroyo administration rising" (PDI, 29 May 2006); "Analysis: Licence to murder" (PDI, 2 June 2006).
(47) In the late 1980s escalating fears within
the CPP-NPA about infiltration by government "deep penetration agents" sparked a series of severe internal "purges". Widespread
human rights abuses, including torture and killings, reportedly led to the deaths of several thousand CPP-NPA members or sympathizers.
Mass graves were subsequently discovered in Luzon, Mindanao and elsewhere (See n.21). CPP-NPA
founder Jose Maria Sison, who in the early 1990s criticized the excesses of the purge and initiated a political "rectification"
campaign within the communist movement, in 2006 rejected government claims that a similar purge was behind the recent political
killings. Commentators noted that the purge of the 1980s, characterised by CPP-NPA "interrogations", "people’s courts"
and subsequent "executions", appeared different from the current pattern of targeted assassinations by unidentified gunmen
on motorcycles. However, the CPP-NPA reportedly admitted responsibility for the "execution" of former NPA chief Romulo Kintanar
in 2003 for "criminal and counter revolutionary acts"; (See Amnesty International statement, Respect Human Rights! ASA/35/004/2003,
January 2003). Two other former senior communist leaders, Filemon Lagman and Arturo Tabaro, who like Kintanar were seen as
part of the "rejectionist" faction which split from the Sison-led "reaffirmist" faction in the early 1990s, were also killed
by unidentified gunmen in 2001 and 2004 respectively reportedly as acts of "revolutionary justice".
(48) Major Points in the tit for tat struggle
against the US-directed war of terror, Ang Bayan, 29 July 2006. The CPP also continued to call for a resumption of peace negotiations
and implemention of the CARHRIHL and other agreements. www.philippinerevolution.net
(49) Under Art. 134 of the Revised Penal Code
(1930): "The crime of rebellion or insurrection is committed by rising publicly and taking arms against the Government…
or depriving the Chief Executive or the Legislature, wholly or partially, of any of their powers or prerogatives". Art.136
criminalizes "[c]onspiracy and proposal to commit coup d’etat, rebellion or insurrection".
(50) Art. 142 of Revised Penal Code.
(51) A number of mass rallies had been planned
on 24 February 2006 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the original "People’s Power" demonstrations that led to
the ouster of President Marcos in 1986.
(52) Under the Constitution, members of Congress
are immune from arrest when the legislature is in session if the alleged crime is punishable by six years imprisonment or
less.
(53) See Appendix 2: Legal protections.
(54) See Appendix 2: Lawful arrest without a
warrant.
(55) Amnesty International report: Philippines: Torture persists: appearance and reality within
the criminal justice system (ASA 35/0012/2003, January 2003).
(56) See Appendix 2: The inquest procedure.
(57) Constitutional rights in respect to the
conduct of arrests in the broad context of the armed conflict have been interpreted restrictedly in a number of Supreme Court
cases, particularly Umil v. Ramos (202 SCRA 251) in 1991. In this case, the Court ruled that subversion or rebellion could
be seen as a ‘continuing offence’, thus a warrantless arrest might be lawful even if the suspect was not actively
doing anything subversive or rebellious at that instance.
(58) The charge of being a "leader" of a rebellion
is considered a non-bailable offence, with those charged with participating as "members" of a rebellion required to provide
a 200,000 peso (US$3,800) bail bond, which is beyond the means of most ordinary Filipinos.
(59) Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokraysa (KPD
- Movement for National Democracy) is a leftist umbrella group campaigning for political and democratic rights and sectoral
social justice issues. This legal national alliance split with other groups from the National Democrats political alliance
that includes the CPP, BAYAN and other leftist organizations. The KPD is referred to as part of the "rejectionist" leftist
factional grouping, in contrast to the latter grouping referred to as "reaffirmist" of the political and ideological program
supported by CPP-NPA founder Jose Maria Sison.
(60) An organization that called for the closure
of US military bases in the Philippines.
(61) United Nations General Assembly, Code of
Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials, adopted by Resolution 34/169 of 17 December 1979.
(62) United Nations Economic and Social Council,
Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials, adopted by the 8th United Nations Congress
on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, Havana, Cuba, 27 August – 7 September 1990.
(63) United Nations Economic and Social Council,
Principles on the Effective Prevention and Investigation of Extra-legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions, recommended in
Resolution 1989/65 of 24 May 1989.
(64) Human Rights Committee, General Comment
No. 31 on Article 2 of the Covenant: The Nature of the General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant,
UN Doc. CCPR/C/74/CRP.4/Rev.6, 21 April 2004, para. 8.
(65) Basic Principles and Guidelines on the
Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of International Human Rights Law and Serious Violations
of International Humanitarian Law, UN Doc. E/CN.4/2005/59, Annex I, 21 December 2004.
(66) Estimates of total numbers of NPA fighters
have fallen from around 20,000 nationwide in the late 1980’s to around 7,000 in 2006. However the NPA continues "tactical"
military offensives, including targeting isolated AFP and police detachments - particularly to seize arms - and ambushes or
landmine attacks. Officials also state that the 2002 listing of the CPP-NPA as a foreign "Terrorist Group" has restricted
the CPP-NPA’s international fund-raising capacity, leading to an increase within the Philippines of "revolutionary tax" or extortion demands made against corporations
and individuals. Such demands continue to be "enforced" by the NPA through armed attacks, including on cellular telephone
transmission stations.
(67) The term often used by officials and the
media to describe armed confrontations or clashes between the armed forces and insurgents.
(68) Combatants killed in armed encounters 1986-2004
(by presidency): President Corazon Aquino (1986-92) AFP-735, NPA - 828; President Fidel Ramos (1992- 98) AFP-2, NPA- 2; President
Joseph Estrada (1999-2001) AFP -130, NPA-90; and President Gloria Arroyo (2001- present) AFP- 494, NPA- 484. Philippine Human
Development Report 2005, Human Development Network, p. 4.
(69) PNP spokesperson Samuel Pagdilao (PDI,
25 May 05).
(70) PDI, 4 August 2006.
(71) Karapatan (Alliance for the Advancement of People’s Rights) is an alliance of human rights advocates.
Seen as within the broad array of left-leaning cause-orientated groups, it focuses on exposing and documenting human rights
violations committed by government forces in the context of counter-insurgency operations, including killings and torture,
and calls for the release of all political prisoners.
(72) Karapatan: 2005 Human Rights Report. In
addition, Bayan Muna reported at least 16 killings of its members in 2004; 36 in 2005 and 26 from the beginning of 2006 until
5 July. The National Lawyers Guild reported at least 25 lawyers, including 10 judges, were killed since 2001 (Public statement:
The National Lawyers Guild condemns the killings of members of the legal profession in the Philippines, 2 August 2006). The Promotion of Church People's Response, reported
at least 21 clergy and lay church workers were killed since 2001. The Center for Trade Union and Human Rights documented at
least 31 union leaders, union and party list organizers and supporters were killed in 2005 (The Year of Living Dangerously:
Trade Union and Human Rights 2005 Report; Center for Trade Union and Human Rights); and the International Federation of Journalists
(IFJ) reported at least 44 journalists were killed since 2001. (IFJ Media Release, 20 June 2006).
(73) The PCHR stated that these findings were
preliminary as most cases were still under investigation, and that most perpetrators remained unidentified due to the "complete
absence of leads" and the inability of witnesses to identify the gunmen.
(74) The establishment of Task Force Usig ("usig"
meaning to inquire or interrogate) by the DILG and PNP was reported to include the creation of a database containing the profile
of the victims and the suspects, intelligence summaries and forensic material (ABS-CBN, 17 June 2006). Commentators expressed
concern that the Task Force, as part of the police, was not sufficiently independent of the alleged security forces perpetrators,
and that the terms of reference were inadequate in that they reportedly focused on the alleged involvement of the military
and police personnel with death squads, and on investigating official claims that CPP-NPA members were in fact responsible
for the killings as part of internal purges (PDI, 2 June 2006). An announcement in July that joint AFP and PNP operations
against insurgents would be stepped up also raised concerns in relation to ensuring the independence and impartiality of police
investigations of political killings of leftist activists.
(75) In the late 1980s escalating fears within
the CPP-NPA about infiltration by government "deep penetration agents" sparked a series of severe internal "purges". Widespread
human rights abuses, including torture and killings, reportedly led to the deaths of several thousand CPP-NPA members or sympathizers.
Mass graves were subsequently discovered in Luzon, Mindanao and elsewhere (See n.21). Exiled
CPP-NPA founder Jose Maria Sison, who in the early 1990s criticized the excesses of the purge and initiated a political "rectification"
campaign within the communist movement, in 2006 rejected government claims that a similar purge was behind the recent political
killings. Commentators noted that the purge of the 1980s, characterised by CPP-NPA "interrogations", "people’s courts"
and subsequent "executions", was markedly different from the current pattern of assassinations by unidentified gunmen on motorcycles.
However the CPP-NPA reportedly admitted responsibility for the "execution" of former NPA chief Romulo Kintanar in 2003 for
"criminal and counter revolutionary acts" and periodic alleged NPA killings of "rival" leftists have been reported. See also
n.32.
(76) The Secretary also stated that out of the
114 cases, 27 have been filed in court and the remaining 86 are still under investigation. From Facts to Action, Report on
the attacks against Filipino Lawyers and Judges, International Fact Finding Mission, Dutch Lawyers for Lawyers Foundation,
July 2006. However, in late July 2006, Task Force Usig updated its May figures and was reported to have collated 127 cases
of political killings since 2001, of which investigations had not been completed in 80 cases, with reportedly only one case
resulting in a conviction (Asian Human Rights Commission, 31 July, 2006).
(77) See n.16 and n.19.
(78) Subsequently the Philippine Commission
on Human Rights conducted an inquiry into complaints that then Colonel Palparan was linked to the abduction and killing of
Eden Marcellena, regional secretary general of the human rights group Karapatan, and Eddie Gumanoy, chair of a peasants’
organization, in Oriental Mindoro in April 2003 (See Appendix 3: Additional case studies).
(79) Sun Star Cebu,
3 September 2002.
(80) Trinity of War – Book III: The Grand
Design of the CPP/NPA/NDF, Northern Luzon Command, AFP, 2005.
(81) See n.38.
(82) "It is my belief that these members of
party lists in Congress are providing the day-to-day policies of the (rebel) movement." Describing an effective counter-insurgency
campaign, Major General Palparan warned, "There will be some ... collateral damage but it will be short and tolerable…The
enemy would blow it up as a massive violation of human rights, but to me it would just be necessary incidents…" Insisting
that he does not condone human rights violations, Major General Palparan put forward the view that potential vigilante-style
actions by anti-communist elements outside of the military organization cannot be stopped completely; "The killings, I would
say, are necessary incidents in a conflict. Because they (the rebels) are violent. … It is not necessary that the military
alone should be blamed. We are armed, of course, and trained to confront and control violence, but other people whose lives
are affected in these areas are also participating and helping us". (Agence France
Presse, 3 February 2006).
(83) See n.43.
(84) See n.12.
(85) The COC-IS, which is reported to currently
exert the predominating influence over the direction and conduct of the GRP peace process and counter-insurgency campaign,
is made up of the Executive Secretary (Presidential Chief of Staff), the National Security Advisor, the Secretaries of Justice
and Defence, and the chiefs of the AFP and PNP.
(86) National Security Advisor Noberto Gonzales,
"We have to stop them from abusing our democratic space and stop them using taxpayers’ money to fund the operations
of the NPA and their front organizations to destroy the very same democratic and constitutional institutions they enjoy."
(Philippine Star, 13 March 2006). He also accused party-list Congress representatives of using government funds, allocated
to all Congress members for constituency development purposes, to finance the CPP-NPA revolutionary struggle. Officials additionally
alleged that while the five congress members facing charges of rebellion were nominees of leftist organizations, they are
also members of the CPP-NPA’s central committee.
(87) International Solidarity fact-finding missions,
led by the human rights group Karapatan and other left-leaning political activist groups, including the Ecumenical Institute
for Labor Education and Research, were organised in Mindoro in 2005 and in Central Luzon, Southern Tagalog, Negros Occidental,
and Compestela Valley (Southern
Mindanao) in May 2006.
(88) In April 2006 a fact-finding mission, led
by the Citizen’s Council for Human Rights and Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokraysa (KPD - Movement for National Democracy),
and including representatives from Task Force Detainees of the Philippines, Ateneo Human Rights Centre, Balay, Families of
Victims of Involuntary Disappearance (FIND) and the Philippine Alliance of Human Rights Advocates visited Bataan and Pampanga.
The mission, prompted by reports of over 50 killings in Central Luzon since September 2005 interviewed a number of witnesses
to alleged killings, "disappearances", and harassment of communities. Major General Palparan took regional command in Central Luzon in September 2005.
(89) Romeo Sanchez, a Bayan Muna, Ilocos regional
coordinator was shot dead in Baguio City in March 2005; Jose "Pepe" Manegdeg, a church worker was killed in Ilocos Sur in
November 2005, and Albert Terredano, a human rights activist and agrarian reform official, was killed in Bangued, Abra, in
November 2005. See Appendix 3: Additional case studies.
(90) An "order of battle" is a list of military
"enemies", ranked in order of their importance and based on intelligence reports, who should be targeted in offensive military
operations. Members of legal activist groups fear that inclusion on such lists sharply increases the risk of being targeted
for assassination. In one illustrative case, Expidito Albarillo, a Bayan Muna municipal coordinator in Mindoro Oriental and
his wife Manuela were shot dead in April 2002 by unidentified gunmen. In March, he had reportedly been summoned to a military
camp and informed that his name was on the "order of battle". An officer allegedly threatened him saying, "We kill everyone
who is in our order of battle and cannot be silenced." For an example of alleged military involvement in the political killing
of a leftist activist, see Audie Lucero in Appendix 3: Additional case studies.
(91) See case study under 5.5.
(92) Bulatlat, Vol. V, No. 14, May 2004.
(93) See Appendix 3: Additional case studies.
(94) Amnesty International: "Disappearances"
and Political Killings - Human Rights Crisis of the 1990s - A Manual for Action (ACT 33/01/94, 1994), p. 157.
(95) The UN Principles were adopted by the Economic
and Social Council in Resolution 1989/65, in 1989 and are supplemented by the UN Manual on the Effective Prevention and Investigation
of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions, 1991. UN Sales No. E.91. IV.I. See the Romy Sanchez case in Appendix 3:
Additional case studies.
(96) From Facts to Action, Report on the attacks
against Filipino Lawyers and Judges, International Fact Finding Mission, Dutch Lawyers for Lawyers Foundation, July 2006.
(97) See n.38.
(98) See Appendix 3: Additional case studies.
(99) PNP Director Emmanuel Carta, (PDI, 23 May
2006).
(100) See n.96, Annex 2.
(101) Open Letter to New Chief of Philippine
National Police, Asian Human Rights Commission, 6 July 2006.
(102) Appendix 1; Point 10.
(103) Faced with the lack of criminal prosecutions
of security personnel accused of human rights violations, five victims of torture under President Marcos launched a civil
suit (Aberca vs. Ver) in 1983 for damages against nine military officers. In 1993, in a rare example of judicial redress,
a Court ruled that the defendants were culpable of "military atrocities" and ordered them to pay damages. However the ruling
has since remained under appeal. Victims of human rights violations also sought redress in other jurisdictions. In 1986, invoking
the US Alien Tort Claims Act, a class action civil suit was filed on behalf of 10,000 Filipinos in a US federal court in Hawaii
against President Marcos’ estate. The US Court
found Marcos responsible for patterns of extrajudicial executions, "disappearances" and torture, and in 1994 awarded the plaintiffs
US$ 2 billion in damages. Legal and other disputes over the amount and the distribution of the award have yet to be finally
resolved.
(104) The breakdown of peace talks with the
CPP-NPA in 1987 led to the promotion of the "Total Approach" counter-insurgency campaign, including the increased use of official
militia, semi-official paramilitary forces and unofficial "vigilante" groups to hold and consolidate NPA-influenced areas
following offensive military operations. Such militias and "vigilantes" often badly trained and not under effective chain-of-command
control, were responsible for widespread extrajudicial executions and other human rights violations. See n.19 and also Out
of Control: Militia abuses in the Philippines, Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights, New York, 1990.
(105) "Members of the security forces have committed
extrajudicial executions with impunity despite the Government’s stated commitment to the protection of human rights
and substantial legal and constitutional guarantees of these rights. According to available information, only two members
of the official security forces, two military "assets" and two former members of the Citizen’s Home Defence Force have
been sentenced to prison terms for extrajudicial executions committed since January 1986"; Chapter 5,‘The problem of
impunity’ in Amnesty International’s report: The Killing Goes On (ASA 35/01/92, 1992). In a notable exception,
16 military men were convicted by a government corruption court in 1990, for the 1983 murder of former Senator Benigno Aquino,
the late husband of President Aquino.
(106) Impunity: Prosecutions of Human Rights
Violations in the Philippines, Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, New York, 1991.
(107) A let-down in Peace, No let- up in War,
Philippine Alliance of Human Rights Advocates, Manila, August 1993.
(108) Amnesty International report: Philippines - Not forgotten: the fate of the "disappeared"
(ASA 35/08/96, November 1996).
(109) See n.55.
(110) Belinda Aquino, Impunity and Human Rights
in International Law and Practice, edited by Naomi Roht-Arriaza, Oxford University Press (1995); Chapter 17.
(111) At least 162 "vigilante-style" killings
of suspected criminals have been reported in Cebu City since December 2004. Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmena stated he would not prioritise
investigations, "As a matter of fact I’m happy some of those killed are robbers…To me, as long as there are fewer
robberies and [bag] snatching, it’s not so bad" (Sun Star, 2 June 2006).
(112) Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte stated,
"I don't mind us being called the murder capital of the Philippines as long as those being killed are the bad guys...From
Day One I said henceforth Davao City will be very, very dangerous for criminals. I've been telling criminals it's a place
where you can die any time. If that's a cue for anybody, that's fine". (The Washington
Post, 30 November 2003).
(113) The Philippine Center for Media Freedom
and Responsibility, Nation Union of Journalists of the Philippines, Reporters Sans Frontiers (Reporters without Borders or
RSF), The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). According to RSF,
IFJ and CPJ, the Philippines is second only to Iraq as the most dangerous place in the world to be a journalist.
(114) Philippine Center for Media Freedom and
Responsibility, Statement, 1 December 2005.
(115) Human Rights Treatise on the Legal and
Judicial Aspects of Impunity, Conference proceedings and related articles, Ateneo Human Rights Center, Makati, 2001.
(116) Amnesty International report, Philippines: The Rolando Abadilla murder inquiry – an
urgent need for effective investigation of torture (ASA 35/08/00, October 2000). In 2006, ten years after credible complaints
of torture by police to extract "confessions" were filed by six men accused of the murder of Rolando Abadilla, no prosecutions
of the police suspects have yet taken place. This state of affairs followed a recommendation by the Philippine Commission
on Human Rights that charges be filed against police suspects as well as prolonged and unexplained delays by Department of
Justice prosecutors to act on these recommendations. The complainants were found guilty of murder and sentenced to death in
1996. Their case remains under appeal.
(117) "Ombudsman’s failure to resolve
cases of murder, extrajudicial killings and torture, prevents police and military from being charged" (Asian Human Rights
Commission Appeal Update, 31 July 2006).
(118) See n.115.
(119) Amnesty International statement, Philippines: The Killing of Gary Dalayhon, (ASA 35/06/95,
September 1995).
(120) See case study in section 5.5.
(121) See n.115.
(122) This prohibition on arbitrary killings
is important because it helps distinguish extrajudicial executions from killings which are not prohibited under international
law, such as killings resulting from reasonable use of force in law enforcement, and killings in armed conflicts not forbidden
by the Geneva Conventions.
(123) Report of the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial,
summary or arbitrary executions to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights, (E/CN.4/2005/7).
(124) ICCPR: Concluding observations of the
Human Rights Committee: Philippines (01/12/2003)
(CCPR/CO/79/PHL). Principal subjects of concern and recommendations: "8. The Committee is concerned about the lack of appropriate
measures to investigate crimes allegedly committed by state security forces and agents, in particular those committed against
human rights defenders, journalists and leaders of indigenous peoples, and the lack of measures taken to prosecute and punish
the perpetrators. Furthermore, the Committee is concerned at reports of intimidation and threats of retaliation impeding the
right to an effective remedy for persons whose rights and freedoms have been violated.
a) The State party should adopt legislative
and other measures to prevent such violations, in keeping with articles 2, 6 and 9 of the Covenant, and ensure effective enforcement
of the legislation...
11. The Committee expresses concern regarding
reported cases of extrajudicial killings, arbitrary detention, harassment, intimidation and abuse, including of detainees,
many of whom are women and children that have neither been investigated nor prosecuted. Such a situation is conducive to perpetration
of further violations of human rights and to a culture of impunity.
The State party should adopt and enforce legislative
and other measures to prevent such violations in keeping with articles 6 and 9 of the Covenant and to improve the implementation
of relevant laws. The State party should conduct prompt and impartial investigations, and prosecute and punish the perpetrators".
See also, Human Rights Record of the Philippines: Spectacular on Paper - Consideration of the second periodic report of the Philippines by the UN Human Rights Committee, (Asian Centre
For Human Rights, 2003).
(125) The National Peace Plan, comprising Chapter
14 of the Medium Term Philippine National Development Plan 2004-2010. Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process
(OPAPP).
(126) See, n.124.
(127) Resolution adopted by the Governing Council
of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Nairobi, 12 May 2006, Philippines: Case No. PHI/01 – Crispin Beltran.
(128) In other words once a prima facie case
has been established: "When there is reasonable ground to believe a crime has been committed and the accused is probably guilty
thereof". Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure (2001) 112, section 4.
(129) Preliminary investigations may be conducted
by provincial or city prosecutors, and also by Municipal Court judges and national or regional state prosecutors.
(130) "Preliminary Investigation is an inquiry
or proceeding for the purpose of defining whether there is sufficient ground to engender a well-founded belief that a crime
cognizable by the Regional Trial Court has been committed and that the respondent is probably guilty thereof". Revised Rules
on Criminal Procedure (2001) 112, section 1.
(131) Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure (2001)
112, section 3(c).
(132) Definition of an Information: "An accusation
in writing charging a person with an offence subscribed by an investigating fiscal and filed with the court". Definition of
a Complaint: "A sworn statement charging a person with an offence, subscribed by the offended party, any peace officer or
other public officer charged with the enforcement of the law violated". See Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure (2001) 112
sections 4 and 3, respectively.
(133) Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure (2001)
112, sections 4-5.
(134) Constitutional rights in respect to arrests
in the broad context of the armed conflict have been interpreted restrictedly in a number of Supreme Court cases, particularly
Umil v. Ramos (202 SCRA 251), in 1991. In this case, the Court ruled that subversion or rebellion could be seen as a ‘continuing
offence’, thus a warrantless arrest might be lawful even if the suspect was not actively doing anything subversive or
rebellious at that instance.
(135) An Inquest is defined as "an informal
and summary investigation, conducted by a public prosecutor (Inquest Fiscal) in criminal cases involving persons arrested
and detained without the benefit of a warrant of arrest issued by a court, for the purpose of determining whether or not said
persons should remain under custody and correspondingly be charged in court." New Rules on Inquest, Department of Justice
Circular No. 61 (21 September 1993) Section 1.
(136) Article 124 of the Penal Code imposes
penalties of imprisonment on officers who arbitrarily detain a person without legal grounds, and, in Article 125, on those
who fail to deliver suspects to the proper judicial authority with 12 hours for crimes punished by light penalties, 18 hours
for crimes punishable by correctional penalties and 36 hours for crimes punishable by afflictive or capital penalties.
(137) A suspect arrested without a warrant requesting
a Preliminary Investigation must sign a waiver, in the presence of counsel, waiving his rights under Penal Code Article 125
to be brought before a judicial authority within 36 hours. By signing the waiver the detainees agrees to remain in custody
of the police pending the conclusion, within a maximum of 15 days, of the requested Preliminary Investigation.
(138) ICCPR Article 9(3): "Anyone arrested or
detained on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial
power and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release".
(139) Principle 11 of the UN Body of Principles
for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment, adopted by General Assembly resolution 43/173
of 9 December 1988:
"A person shall not be kept in detention without
being given an effective opportunity to be heard promptly by a judicial or other authority…" Principle 37: "A person
detained on a criminal charge shall be brought before a judicial or other authority provided by law promptly after his arrest.
Such authority shall decide without delay upon the lawfulness and necessity of detention… A detained person shall, when
brought before such an authority, have the right to make a statement on the treatment received by him while in custody".
(140) Conrado Balweg was former priest who joined
the CPP-NPA and founded the Cordillera People’s Liberation Army. After a split within communist movement in the early
1990s Conrado Balweg was reportedly sentenced to death as an act of "revolutionary justice". He was killed in 1999 and the
NPA later claimed responsibility.
(141) The Revolutionary Proletarian Army-Alex
Boncayao Brigade (RPA-ABB).