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Category: Maguindanao massacre

Chainsaw gang

Nilabas ni Chairperson Leila de Lima ng Human Rights Commission ang sulat ng Concerned People’s Organization kay Gloria Arroyo Agosto ng 2008 pa.

Doon sa sulat, isinumbong ng CPO ang mga kalabisan ng mga Ampatuan. Ikinuwento nila ang nangyari sa dating asawa ni Maguindanao Governor Andal Ampatuan Sr.

Ang kwento, at ito ay kalat na kalat sa Maguindanao, ay itong asawa ni Andal Sr (hind sinasabi kung ilan ang asawa nng mga Ampatuan na ito) ay na-inlove sa iba. Siguro bata pa itong babae kasi matanda na itong si Andal Sr. Ang anak niya, si Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr., ang tinuturong namuno sa Nov 23 massacre at ngayon ay nakakulong sa NBI.

Arroyo lifts martial law in Maguindanao

Martial law will be lifted in Maguindanao at 9 p.m. Saturday, eight days after it was imposed by President Gloria Arroyo.

Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita said Arroyo lifted Proclamation No. 1959 on the recommendation of the Cabinet which concluded that the government has met its main objectives in placing Maguindanao under martial rule and suspending the writ of habeas corpus following the Nov. 23 massacre that left 57 people dead.

Ermita said, however, Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat and Cotabato City will remain under a state of emergency.

Santiago hits, Locsin defends martial law

by Carmela Fonbuena,
abs-cbnNEWS.com/Newsbreak

Biazon slams Devanadera for poor defense

An apparent debate between Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago and Makati City Rep. Teodoro Locsin on martial law in Maguindanao stood out in the second day of Congress’ joint session.

Santiago opposed while Locsin defended Proclamation 1959 declaring martial law and suspending the writ of habeas corpus in Maguindanao.

“It is not without irony that I stand here defending martial law. But I do defend it. Nowhere and at no time has martial law been justified nor based more sufficiently or incontrovertible facts…. Look at the bodies. Look at the arms stockpiles,” Locsin told the plenary.

Congress holds joint session on 1959

by VERA Files

Joint session on 1959 by Mario Ignacio
Joint session on 1959 by Mario Ignacio
Congress convened Wednesday its historic joint session to discuss the declaration of martial law in Maguindanao following the Nov. 23 massacre that left 57 people dead, including 30 journalists, in the country’s worst election-related violence.

Legislators grilled Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, Justice Secretary Agnes Devanadera, Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno and Philippine National Police Chief Jesus Versoza on the basis for Proclamation 1959 signed by President Gloria Arroyo last week.

The joint session, which started shortly after 4 p.m., lasted six hours. Outside Congress, opponents of martial law held a rally urging the revocation of Proclamation 1959.

Click here for VERA Files photojournalist Mario Ignacio’s photos.

“Where is the President?”

Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lawmakers Wednesday cited the glaring absence of the commander in chief, who declared martial law in Maguindanao province, during the first joint session of Congress.

Day of mourning, indignation

by VERA Files

Bibeth Orteza by Chit Estella
Bibeth Orteza by Chit Estella
Never again to martial law. Justice for the victims of Maguindanao massacre. Stop killing journalists.

These were the resounding messages in Wednesday’s media-led indignation rally at the Chino Roces (formerly Mendiola) Bridge held to demand justice for victims of the Nov. 23 massacre in Maguindanao and protest the imposition of martial rule in the province.

Black was the color of the day. Participants from different sectors mostly wore black clothes and arm bands to assail the attacks on the media, rule of law, and accountability.

VERA Files photojournalist Mario Ignacio and trustee Chit Estella share their photos:

Click here (VERA Files).

A portion of the statement by the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility:

The disciple disagrees with the master

Related updates:

SC:no TRO

Verafiles: SC chief raises concern over martial law in Maguindanao

Gloria Arroyo, the brazen violator of the Constitution, will love constitutionalist, Fr. Joaquin Bernas, S.J. for this.

Bernas, in his column in the Inquirer says, “ for purposes of constitutional law is satisfied if there exists an armed force whose activities have the effect of preventing the government from implementing its laws in any part of the Philippines.”

The Supreme Court deferred the issuance of a temporary restraining order against the implementation of Proclamation 1959 imposing martial law in Maguindanao.

Instead, the high court ordered President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), and the Philippine National Police (PNP) to comment on the various petitions filed questioning the constitutionality of the proclamation, high court deputy spokesman Gleo Guerra said at a press conference today.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/nation/view/20091208-240833/Supreme-Court-defers-ruling-on-martial-law

His student, lawyer Edwin Lacierda, calls his mentor’s opinion “reckless” and “dangerous”.

Bernas, furthermore, expects Arroyo getting her way both in the Congress and the Supreme Court. “ I do not see either the Supreme Court or Congress revoking her decision now.”

Lacierda said, “With opinions like these, talo na tayo sa boxing bago pa pumasok sa ring!”

Read the two views on Proclamation 1959.

No joint session today; postponed to tomorrow, Wednesday

The joint session of Congress on Proclamation 1959 declaring martial law in Maguindanao and suspension of writ of habeas corpus will be tomorrow, Wednesday starting at 4 p.m.

Representatives of both chambers of the Legislature agreed late last night on the rules of the joint session. Those rules will be approved in separate regular sessions today.

Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano said they expect the joint sessions to last two or three days because they will be inviting resource speakers. Among them, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, AFP Chief Victor Ibrado, PNP Chief Jesus Versoza, Justice Secetary Agnes Devanadera, Defense Secretary Norberto Gonzales, and others.

The voting will be jointly, where it is expectred that the pro-martial law Arroyo allies will drown out the anti-martial legislators.

Si Arroyo pa ba ang nagpapatakbo ng pamahalaan?

Related update: Comelec wants election paraphernalia recovered from Ampatuans

Bakit ba hindi lumalabas si Gloria Arroyo para magsalita sa napaka-mahalagang bagay na nagyayari sa bansa: ang pagdeklara ng martial law.

Kahit sa Maguindanao lang ang deklarasyon, isang mahalagang desisyun yun at walang presidente ang gumawa nun mula nang maibalik ang demokrasya sa Pilipinas.

Bakit si Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita ang pumirma ng deklarasyon pati ang report na kanyang pinadala sa Kongreso? Kahit sa TV, hindi siya lumabas para ipahayag itong mahalagang proklamasyun.

Siya pa ba ang nagpapatakbo ng Pilipinas? O puppet na lang siya nina Ermita at mga tinatawag na “hardliners”sa Malacañang.