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Year: 2010

Military defies SC on 43

AFP fails to present detainees

by Norman Bordadora
Philippine Daily Inquirer

Despite a writ of habeas corpus issued by the Supreme Court, the military and the police failed to present before the Court of Appeals Friday the 43 health workers arrested on Feb. 6 on suspicion of being members of the communist New People’s Army (NPA).

Statement of the CHR Chair Leila de Lima:

Based on our team’s follow up interview with, and our own doctors’ physical check up of, the detainees last Thursday, February 11, no allegations and traces of physical torture. There’s one though who claims that during interrogation, he felt some twitching of his thighs which he attributes to some form of electric shock. He also claims to have smelled a gas-like substance. Some male detainees have injuries in their wrists due to tight handcuffs. About two (2) of them have injuries surrounding the eye area due to tight blindfolding.

Our initial findings of mental/psychological torture REMAIN, i.e., continuous blindfolded and handcuffed for 36 hours, the resultant indignities (somebody else feeding them or removing their under wears, forced to wear pampers), repeated interrogations using scare tactics like making them believe that they can be killed or disappear anytime or that something will happen to their families if they don’t cooperate. Also, repeated denial to right to counsel at the time of the arrest, during interrogations and inquest. We also learned that interrogations at odd hours midnight continued even after our first visit last February 8. I immediately called the attention of Gen. Segovia about that. He said he would look into it.

Based on our team’s interview with the two (2) barangay kagawads who accompanied the raiding team and witnessed the search, there appears to be NO indication of planting of firearms or other evidence. I hasten to add though that we’re not prepared at this point to completely rule out such planting of evidence. A further probe is needed on this. I also agree with the detainees’ counsels, and I said this before, that the search warrant is patently defective on its face.

AFP’s failure to produce the 43 detainees at yesterday’s hearing is really a dangerous precedent in our justice system. The cited reason, lack of material time to prepare for transit the so-called high-risk detainees, to my mind, is not a valid one. It goes against the very essence of a writ of habeas corpus. If the AFP authorities had the will to obey the order, they could, with best or earnest efforts, have done so. A contempt citation would have been in order. I just hope and pray that between yesterday and the next hearing on Monday they’re no longer subjected to further interrogations, mental torture, indignities and other human rights violations. May I take this opportunity to issue this stern warning to the AFP authorities and detention officers/personnel to CEASE AND DESIST form performing such and similar acts. Irrespective of who they are, alleged NPAs or not, they all have human rights. No one deserves to be treated inhumanely.

Col. Aurelio Baladad, the representative of the military at the habeas corpus hearing, told the appellate court that there was no time to coordinate security measures for the health workers’ transfer from Camp Capinpin in Tanay, Rizal, to Manila.

Election watchdogs quarrel

Last week the Commission on Elections denied the tried- and –tested National Citizen’s Movement for Free Election accreditation for an election watchdog role for the May 10, 2010 polls.

Namfrel, which applied accreditation in partnership with the CBCP-NASSA (Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines-National Secretariat for Social Action) was accused by two Comelec officials of being “partisan.”

Without Namfrel, the election watchdog role will be borne wholly by Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting represented by former ambassador to Vatican Tita de Villa.

Four groups have expressed concern of Namfrel’s exclusion from election watchdog duties. The Bishops–Businessmen’s Conference for Human Development, Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines, Makati Business Club, and Management Association of the Philippines, Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants issued a statement expressing dismay and concern.

Their statement:

Malacañang’s handiwork

The hand of Malacañang, particularly Gloria Arroyo’s husband, Mike Arroyo, is obvious in the “Wanted” posters for Senator Panfilo “Ping” Lacson.

The “Wanted” photos were posted along Roxas Boulevard by members of the Volunteers against Crime and Corruption along Roxas Boulevard last Wednesday despite the fact that the issuance of the arrest warrant is still being questioned before the Supreme Court.

VACC is headed by Dante Jimenez, who left the original anti-crime group, Crusade Against Violence.

I retrieved a 2001 opinion piece by Jimenez in the Philippine Star Ngayon which spoke enthusiastically of Arroyo joining the VACC as volunteer lawyer.

Here it is:

Handlers move to stem drop in Noynoy ratings

‘Non-trapo’ campaign to be reviewed

by Wendell Vigilia
Malaya

What went wrong?

The amalgamation of ideas from various civil society, politicians and volunteers has caused an internal “struggle of perspective” in Sen. Noynoy Aquino’s presidential campaign, according to Liberal Party campaign manager Florencio “Butch” Abad.

A discussion on how Aquino’s presidential campaign is being run by his political strategists and handlers came in the wake of a drop in his approval rating and a sudden rise in that of Sen. Manuel Villar of the Nacionalista Party.

The latest Pulse Asia survey showed Aquino with 37 percent against the 35 percent of Villar who has bombarded the television industry with “his millions, or probably billions, worth of advertisements.”

“I’m sure there was a struggle of perspective on how to run the campaign,” he said in an interview in ANC’s “Strictly Politics.” “That’s the nature of the animal (the new LP).”

Ang salot ni Gloria Arroyo

Kamakailan binatikos ni Deputy Presidential Spokesman Gary Olivar ang mga kandidato nga ginagawang isyu pa rin daw ang kanyang amo na si Gloria Arroyo samantalang busy raw ngayon sa pag-aayos ng kanyang “legacy” .

Pagkatapos sirain ang lahat na institusyon pagdemokratiko para lamang maprotektahan ang sarili, gusto ni Gloria Arroyo mamahalin siya ng taumbayan? Nahihibang siya kasama na rin ang kanyang mga alagad.

At akala naman niya maniniwala ang taumbayan na hihinto na si Arroyo sa kanyang pagka-ganid sa kapangyarihan? Eh di sana hindi na tumakbo sa pagka-kongresista.

Kung magpapaloko pa ang taumbayan kay Arroyo, talagang dapat lang talaga tayong magdusa.

Isyu pa rin talaga si Arroyo ngayon kahit hindi siya kandidato sa pagka-pangulo. Kasi sa baho ni Arroyo, kung sino ang kanyang didikitan nagiging mabaho na rin. Tingnan nyo ang nangyayari ngayon kay Gilbert Teodoro, ang opisyal na kandidato ng Lakas-Kampi, partido ng administrasyon? Kahit pa maraming may gusto kay Teodoro, hindi rin talaga nila masikmura na kinakampihan niya si Arroyo.

Raid!

Update: 43 health workers get SC writ

by Michael Tan
Philippine Daily Inquirer

I know some of you are expecting a column about yesterday’s Inquirer forum at UP with the presidential candidates. I have a lot to share about that event, but I have to postpone that article because I want to write about a very urgent issue, one which has implications for the elections.

I’m referring to the raid conducted last Saturday on a health workers’ training seminar organized by an NGO, the Council for Health and Development (CHD), resulting in the arrest of 42 of the workshop participants. That included two physicians, one nurse and one midwife. All the others were community health workers, most of whom were poor farmers or workers who have been trained as paramedics and health educators. The 42 were brought to Camp Panopio in Tanay, Rizal.

The media reports have mostly featured the military’s claims that the workshop participants were rebels and they were being trained to make bombs. There has been little from the detainees themselves because the mass media have been denied access to the prisoners.

My column today mainly uses information from Dr. Delen de la Paz, vice president of Health Action for Human Rights, and press statements from CHD.

The workshop was being held on private property, a farm/resort owned by Dr. Melecia Velmonte, a retired 71-year-old professor emeritus at the UP College of Medicine who often lets health NGOs use her place for such training activities.

Mangudadatu to shake hands with Ampatuan Sr?

Update: Ampatuan Sr. and 126 others charged with murder.

Someone very much involved in the 2010 elections said Buluan vice Mayor Ismael “Toto” Mangudadatu is agreeable to shaking hands with the patriarch of the Ampatuan clan for the sake of peace in Maguindanao.

Mangudadatu’s wife, Jenalyn, his sister, and some relatives were among the more than 57 killed in the Nov. 23 massacre allegedly perpetrated by the Mangudadatus in a fierce rivalry for the control of the province, the second poorest in the country. Thirty of those killed were journalists, who accompanied Mangudadatus’ wife who was to file her husband’s certificate of candidacy for mayor.

Andal Ampatuan, Jr, mayor of Datu Unsay in Maguindanao , has been identified by witnesses as the one who led the massacre. He has been charged with several counts of murder and is detained at the National Bureau of Investigation.

Ampatuan Sr. is in a military hospital in Davao City; his sons Datu Zaldy, Datu Anwar and Datu Sajid are detained in General Santos City with his son-in-law Datu Akmad Ampatuan Sr., husband of eldest daughter Rebecca.

Judge who issued Lacson arrest nominated for CA

It’s too much to be just a simple coincidence.

Last Friday, Manila RTC Judge Myra Fernandez issued the arrest warrant against Sen. Panfilo Lacson for the murder of publicist Salvador “Bubby” Dacer and his driver Emmanuel Corbito.

It was revealed last Monday that the Judicial and Bar Council, by a vote of seven out of eight members, recommended her nomination to the Court of Appeals. Sen. Francis Escudero, a JBC member, as head of the Senate Justice committee, was the only one that did not vote for Fernandez.