Monday, December 16, 2013

Drones To Kill Filipino Civilians Too


News Release

December 16, 2013

Reference: Vince Casilihan
Cellphone number: 09481390488


“It is despicable for a government to scurry on beefing up its fangs in the face of grinding poverty, injustice, and discontent.” This is what Vince Casilihan of Karapatan-Bikol has to say in reaction to the Aquino government’s plan on purchasing unmanned aerial vehicles or drones to be used in intelligence and combat operations.

The Aquino government has provided P684 million to the Department of National Defense for the acquisition of six drones for the Philippines Marine Corps. The human rights group Karapatan-Bikol believes that no later will the other branches of the Armed Forces of the Philippines follow suit in employing drones in it’s counterinsurgency campaign. To this, Casilihan criticizes Aquino’s “crooked” concept of addressing armed conflict. He said, “Here is a warfreak of a government buying more weapons, instead of allocating public funds to education, health, agricultural subsidies, and other social services – whose dearth are among the legitimate grounds for waging armed opposition.”

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

KADENA BICOLANDIA Links People’s Dissent to Oppose Aquino’s String of Predicaments

News Release
December  10, 2013
Reference: Vince Casilihan

“Oppressed people when united lose nothing but their chains.”  This is how Vince Casilihan of Karapatan-Bikol rephrases the motivation of a great thinker, as the human rights organization spearheads today’s commemoration of International Human Rights Day with an expanse of mass actions along the major roads of Bicol region.

Dubbed as KADENA BICOLANDIA, Casilihan describes the extensive network of protest actions as a demonstration of Bicolanos’ dissent against the Pork Barrel Scam, graft and corruption, and various torments imposed by the Aquino regime on Bicolanos. “Adversity after adversity, Noynoy Aquino is at the forefront of inflicting a chain of problems on the people,” points Casilihan. “While we are hunched with sweat and blood at toiling to create the nation’s wealth, Aquino and his hacendero-comprador ilk run amok at stealing public funds and sanctioning the further violation of our rights and legitimate demands,” Casilihan added.

The Karapatan-Bikol spokesperson enumerates the string of hardships Bicolanos face to the worsening of their daily survival: “We have thieves for lawmakers, and The Lord of Thieves for a president; our people live in the dark, literally, as we have greed-driven capitalists taking over ALECO, CASURECO 3, and soon, SORECO and the rest; we are left with toxic wastes while large foreign mining corporations are monsters plundering our minerals; we have rabid dogs donning AFP uniforms and running around on a killing binge targetting protesters.”  The list goes on, Casilihan furthers, as he likewise draws attention to age-old landlessness of peasants, escalating prices of goods and services, and the declining value of stagnant wages, among others.

To this, Casilihan reaffirms the aptness of KADENA BICOLANDIA as the people’s opposition to the Aquino regime’s ills. “We face Aquino’s string of predicaments with Bicolanos’ protests linked across the region,” he sums up. To be likewise participated in by various progressive organizations, KADENA BICOLANDIA will be started off from Quirino Highway in the town of Sta. Elena, Camarines Norte, all the way to Matnog and Bulan towns in Sorsogon. One hundred ten (110) mass action centers will be put up in key places along Quirino and Maharlika Highways, as well as along the roads of Catanduanes, and all over the three major islands of Masbate. Protest concerts in the major urban areas will conclude today’s activity.

In conclusion, Casilihan echoes the people’s determination: “Not only with arms united, but fervor after fervor, we will conjoin with the last man on the link to demonstrate our relentless struggle to break the chain of ills being forced upon us by Aquino and the system that he represents.”



Monday, December 9, 2013

Thrash Bureaucrat Capitalism – the Foundation of Corruption, Deceit of “Righteous Path” Rhetoric, and Militarization!


Karapatan-Bikol’s Statement on the 65th-year commemoration of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights 


December 10, 2013

Reference: Vince Casilihan 
Cellphone number: 09481390488


The people must denounce and fight the US-Aquino regime in its all-out sponsorship of the rotten political system which spawns corruption, deceives the people with the lies of “Matuwid na Daan”, and institutionalizes militarization as the state’s foremost fangs of oppression and primary defense of the ruling system’s evils.

The ever-decaying ruling system gravely damages the people. Bureaucrat Capitalism, essentially the ruling class’ mode of running government as a money-making enterprise, breeds the extensive and deeply-rooted corruption. While the people labor in creating the nation’s wealth, they are being robbed of their yield by landlords and big capitalists elected into public office. They are denied services and rights while politicians wallow in stolen money.

With the Pork Barrel King Noynoy Aquino at the forefront of corruption, his regime babbles on the deceitful “Matuwid na Daan” rhetoric in order to conceal their theft. Subsidized by public funds, Aquino the Lord of Thieves employs his Public Relations experts with the exclusive task of distorting the truth and depicting him as the “Nemesis of Corruption” in the face of glaring evidences of his theft and crookedness in government.

Worst, Aquino’s regime intensifies militarization as its fundamental buttress in perpetuating power. Generals of the Armed Forces of the Philippines likewise bloat with the people’s money in exchange for their compliance in the armed suppression of the people’s resistance. AFP’s attacks on the lives and livelihoods of the people in the name of Oplan Bayanihan has the ultimate goal of quelling the people’s militant fight and keeping Aquino and his class in power.

But regardless of intensified Oplan Bayanihan, the people do not cower. Instead, they seethe with anger at the AFP’s violation of their rights. In particular, Bicolano masses are enraged at the 9th Infantry Division Philippine Army’s brutal counter-insurgency campaign in the region. Those condemning Aquino’s evils, those resolute in advancing the rights and welfare of the oppressed and exploited, are the ones being attacked and targetted for murder by the mercenaries of the regime. Under Aquino’s three years in power, Karapatan-Bicol has documented 1, 255 cases of human rights violations in the region. These  violations have attacked 13, 906 individuals, 38 of whom are victims of extrajudicial killings.

It is just to loathe 9th ID’s aggression on the Bicolano people. But beyond battling human rights violations being committed by the AFP, the people ultimately direct their rage against the rotten ruling system. They remain firm in fighting in order to gradually defeat a rotten system that steals public funds, poisons the people’s minds, and assaults just struggles.###


Read in Filipino

Burukrata Kapitalismo: Ugat ng Kurapsyon, Panlilinlang ng Matuwid na Daan, at Militarisasyon, Ibagsak!


Pahayag ng Karapatan-Bikol sa Paggunita sa ika-65 taon ng Pandaigdigang Deklarasyon ng Karapatang Pantao

Disyembre 10, 2013

Reference: Vince Casilihan 
Cellphone number: 09481390488
                                              
Dapat kasuklaman at labanan ng mamamayan ang rehimeng US-Aquino dahil sa sukdulang pagtataguyod nito ng bulok na sistemang nagpapasimuno ng korapsyon, lumilinlang sa mamamayan sa kasinungalingan ng “Matuwid na Daan”, at nagpapatibay sa militarisasyon bilang pangunahing pangil sa pagtatanggol sa kabuktutan ng naghaharing sistema. 

Labis na pumipinsala sa mamamayan ang tumitinding kabulukan ng kasalukuyang sistema.  Ang Burukrata Kapitalismo, na sa esensya ay pagpapatakbo ng gubyerno bilang isang negosyo ng mga naghaharing uri, ang siyang pinag-uugatan ng malaganap at malalim na korapsyon. Habang ang mamamayan ay lugmok sa pagpapakahirap upang lumikha ng yaman ng bansa, pinagnanakawan lamang sila ng mga panginoong maylupa’t malalaking negosyanteng naluklok sa gubyerno. Pinagkakaitan ng serbisyo at karapatan ang mamamayan samantalang naglulunoy sa pinagnakawang pera ang mga pulitiko.


Monday, March 25, 2013

Activists claim Palparan man sowing terror in Bicolandia


       March 23, 2013                                                                                              Reference: Vince Casilihan 
       Press Statement

                                                                                                                  
Activists claim Palparan man sowing terror in Bicolandia 

 Manila, Philippines- The human rights watchdog Karapatan-Bicol on Saturday revealed that one of military officers allied with former army general Jovito Palparan Jr. is taking charge of the counter-insurgency campaign in the urban barangays of Legaspi City, Albay province. 

"The progressives and ordinary people of the main capital of Albay and the entire Bicol Region are placed under the spyglass of an extreme danger posed by Oplan Bayanihan courtesy of Col. Ricardo Visaya, a military protege of The Butcher and certified Godfather of Extra Judicial Killing who is no other than former Army Major Gen. Jovito Palparan Jr.," said Karapatan-Bicol  Vince Casilihan in a press statement.   

"Col. Visaya who possesses the same brutal quality and fascist mindset of Palparan is set to spread state terror in the heart of Bicolandia as head of the peace and development council of the Armed Forces of the Philippines in Bicol region," Casilihan stressed. 

Friday, March 22, 2013

Military rules in Bicol region


Schools and village halls are being used as camps by soldiers. Residents have to seek the permission of the military and sign in their logbooks whenever they go in and out of the community.
By JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
Bulatlat.com
GUINOBATAN, Albay – Before Felix Paz, 81, became a peasant leader in the Bicol region, he was a farmer himself. Having his own share of hard work in the fields during his days as a farmer, Paz toldBulatlat.com, life is harder for farmers now because – they do not just worry about making a living. Their rights are violated by no less than the government itself.
Paz was among the supporters of farmers from communities in Guinobatan, Albay who held a protest action last Feb. 25. Though it coincided with the commemoration of the first EDSA uprising in 1986, their protest was far from celebrating the supposed restoration of democracy in the country.
Peasants from Bicol region held simultaneous protest actions in Guinobatan, Albay, Bato, Camarines Sur and in Barcelona, Sorsogon against the continuing militarization in their respective communities.
“We are united in fighting for our basic rights,” Vince Casilihan of Karapatan – Bicol, said.



Panunupil at paglaban sa Bikol


http://pinoyweekly.org/new/2013/03/panunupil-at-paglaban-sa-bikol/

PNoy reminded in Bicol visit over unsolved killing of student activist Cris Hugo


CRIS HUGO RARE PHOTO. Before his death Cris Hugo is the LFS Regional Coordinator in Bicol, National Council member of LFS and Grand Chancellor Alpha Phi Omega (APO).
By Joey Natividad
Special Correspondent
CITY OF NAGA, Bicol Region (BicolToday.com/21-Mar-2013) – Human rights group on Tuesday expressed dismay over the unsolved killing of student leader Cris Hugo 7 (seven) years ago in Legaspi City, reminding the tragic incident that wasted the student’s life in 2006, as the nation mourns over the recent suicide of student Kristel Tejada in Manila, and over reports of President Aquino’s visit in this city for the Liberal Party rally on Thursday, March 21.
The strong statement by the human rights activists regarding Hugo’s unsolved killing was made to remind the public as President Aquino is scheduled to visit the City of Naga on Thursday for the Liberal Party rally where he will endorse his party senatorial candidates. The campaign is part of his provincial sorties in propping up his Senatorial slate and local party bets.
Cris Hugo was the 85th of the 205 victims of extra-judicial killings in the Bicol Region during the time of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Karapatan lamented that the slaying of Hugo by a gunman, 7 years ago was still unsolved, and that the suspect was a military man. Hugo had been involved in several protest actions with other youth activists in Albay, and that he had been one of the victims in the wave of alleged “systematic killings” launched by right-wing death squads on dissidents under the then Arroyo Administration, beginning 2004- 2010.
The “death campaign” that time had sparked an international justice inquiry that led into the creation of the Melo Commission which investigated the mysterious killing of civilians and known anti-Arroyo leaders and activists. Some members of the media had also fallen as victims to the death squads.
Cris, age 20, was a student leader at Bicol University College of Arts and Letters (BUCAL), in Legaspi City, Albay . He was regional coordinator and national council member of the League of Filipino Students (LFS). He was also the newly elected Grand Chancellor of the Alpha Phi Omega (APO Fraternity) chapter at BU that time.
“Culture of impunity still continues, 7 years have passed. Justice seems illusive for all the victims of Human rights violation under the (then) Arroyo Regime,” Vince Casilihan, Bicol spokesperson of Karapatan informed Bicol Today.com.
“Desperation to quell growing protests, we hold the Arroyo and Aquino administration criminally and politically liable for the killing of Hugo and the continuous attacks against our youth leaders,” he said.
Karapatan believes President Aquino continues to shed the blood of young patriotic leaders whose only ‘faults’ are that they continue to be steadfast and vigilant in upholding civil liberties, and calling for social change despite continuous tyranny and repression perpetuated by this administration.
Casilihan said that while leftist leaders and organizations are seemingly the primary targets of the government’s crackdown, ordinary civilians remain the most vulnerable victims, specially the youth.
“We are calling for the Aquino Administration for immediate action, but it seems a dream for us human rights workers, no one is held accountable from GMA’s victims until now. Cris Hugo is no other than Kristel Tejada, both whom government holds accountability on their early deaths.[BicolToday.com]

URBAN MILITARIZATION SA LEGAZPI, MAPANLINLANG! ILANTAD, TUTULAN!


       March 22, 2013                                                                                        Reference: Vince Casilihan 
       Press Statement
                                                                                                                  

URBAN MILITARIZATION SA LEGAZPI, MAPANLINLANG! ILANTAD, TUTULAN!

Ang urban militarization sa porma ng peace and development ng 901st Infantry Brigade, PA sa pangunguna ng commanding  officer nito na si Col. Ricardo R. Visaya ay bahagi ng mapanlinang na Oplan Bayanihan  (OPB) ng rehimeng US-Aquino. Malinaw na ang urban militarization na ito sa mga  barangay ng Arimbay, Rawis, Bigaa, Pawa, Victory  Village,  Tamaoyan, Tula-Tula, Lapu-lapu ay nakatuon pangunahin sa mga militante at progresibong organisasyong masa at progresibong grupong Party List  sapagkat alam ng publiko na wala namang presensya ng mga rebelde sa mga lugar na ito.

            Si Col. Ricardo R. Visaya ay masugid na tagapagpatupad ng tigmak-sa-dugong Oplan Bantay Laya (OBL) ng rehimeng Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Eksperto siya sa vilification campaigns  at harassment laban sa mga progresibo’t  militanteng organisasyong masa at Party List groups.

            Noong kasagsagan ng pananalasa ng Oplan Bantay Laya, kumander  siya ng 69th IB  PA  sa ilalim ng komand ng berdugong retiradong heneral na si  Jovito Palparan.  Dumanas ng harassments at  vilification campaigns ang mga progressive and militant organizations sa Central Luzon sa kamay ng dalawang Army Officers na ito.


Monday, February 25, 2013

Karapatan-Camarines Norte’s demand a year after the massacre in Barangay Malaya, Labo: Justice for Mancera family!


Press Statement

Reference: Maricel Delen
Coordinator, Karapatan-Camarines Norte
Cellphone Number: 09217917851

February 25, 2013

The year 2012 left a bloody record of human rights violations which placed the province of Camarines Norte with the most number of cases in the region. Most striking of these is the massacre of the Mancera family – father Benjamin, along with his two sons Richard and Michael. The lone survivor was Benjamin’s daughter Leonisa. The grim murders were committed a year ago in Malaya Village, Labo town, in the province of Camarines Norte.  Immediately after the crime, a Fact-Finding Mission was conducted by Karapatan-Camarines Norte, Karapatan-Bicol, and Camarines Norte People’s Organization. Evidences and testimonies clearly charge the 49th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army as the butchers. But it is detestable that justice remains elusive because of the culture of impunity which continues to prevail in the country, most especially with regards to cases of human rights violations.

At present, conditions still allow for the worsening of human rights violations in the province as well as the whole region under Oplan Bayanihan. Peace and Development Teams continue to occupy barangays and have never brought peace nor development in the communities. Instead, their presence have resulted to 248 individuals from 19 villages in 3 towns falling direct victims to violations, as recorded by Fact Finding Missions of Karapatan.

And regardless of the Mancera Massacre’s recollection still distinct in the memories of the villagers, the 49th IB’s PDT insolently occupies the Barangay Hall of Malaya village up to the present. Troops that prowl Malaya and nearby Pag-asa belong to the 49th IB’s Charlie Company based in neighboring Barangay Dumagmang. Its commanding officer, 2nd Lt. Dominic Olayvar, is responsible for the unlawful raid on Karapatan-Camarines Norte and Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas’ provincial offices on November 22, 2010.

Likewise, Governor Edgardo Tallado and the local government’s lackluster behavior on demanding justice for human rights violations in the province disappoints the victims and their families. Worse, Tallado endorses Oplan Bayanihan, being the chairperson of the Regional Peace and Order Council. The 49th IB serves as his security force.

On the other hand, Karapatan-Camarines Norte salutes Leonisa Mancera’s courage and resolve to carry on with the demand for justice to her family. Likewise, we are inspired by the martyrdom of the late Brgy Malaya village chief Merlyn Bermas, whose magnanimity in giving protection to the Mancera survivors, led to her extra-judicial murder. Karapatan and the rest of the people’s organizations will draw inspiration from these sacrifices until justice is claimed for the state’s throngs of victims.###




To stay alive, the people must fight Oplan Bayanihan


News Release

Reference:  John Concepcion
Karapatan-Bicol Spokesperson
Cellphone Number: 09108258398
Landline Number: (054) 4956191

February 25, 2013

The struggle for life and livelihood intensifies today as thousands of Bicolanos mass up to heighten their fight against the deaths and damages that Oplan Bayanihan has inflicted upon the region. As the nation remembers EDSA I uprising, Bicolanos on the other hand will troop to government offices and military camps to demand the pull-out of soldiers from the countrysides, and call for an end to the government’s deadly counter-insurgency campaign.

 “February 25 supposedly marks the people’s triumph against Martial Law. But clearly, democracy remains chained as most of Bicol’s rural villages continue to be under the military’s control,” John Concepcion, Karapatan-Bikol Spokesperson said. The human rights organization exposes that under Oplan Bayanihan in Bicol, no less than 37 civilians have been killed by the military, and an immense loss in agricultural produce has been inflicted by the so-called Peace and Development Teams. “Peasants are being suspected of being New People’s Army supporters and are being killed. Farms are neglected because of fear, hence the worsening of livelihoods, because military operations prove deadly to villagers,”  adds Concepcion.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Peace of the Dead


A graveyard’s peace drapes the countrysides of Bicol. The muteness of peasant huts, the hush of wary gestures in the farms, the tautness of villagers’ faces – all these bespeak the dread that has crept across the barrios of the region. This silence is the dark peace of Oplan Bayanihan.

Now entering its third year, the government’s “internal peace and security plan” (a moderation for “counter-insurgency”), patterned after the US Counterinsurgency Guide of 2009, has for its ultimate objective the reduction of the “capabilities of internal armed threats…to a level that they can no longer threaten the stability of the state and civil authorities can ensure the safety and well-being of the Filipino people.” In the Bicol region, with the government having only one formidable armed opponent, Oplan Bayanihan means to “render the NPA irrelevant.” The Philippine Army’s 9th Infantry Division initiates the campaign in the region.

For the Bicolano masses however, Oplan Bayanihan only means thus: Terror and Deceit,  a two-pronged spear of brutality and psywar being thrust at the people leading to further impoverishment in a land already belonging to the country’s four poorest regions.

Terror and Deceit: A Predicament in Pairs
In the province of Albay, Oplan Bayanihan’s misleading “Peace and Development” operations have for more than two years been ravaging the interiors of Guinobatan town, and has turned a cluster of villages in the second district into a seemingly enormous military complex with large deployment of Philippine Army troops and CAFGU paramilitaries. These state forces, sustained by public money, essentially come to be private security forces for companies undertaking the construction of an international airport, and also of major eco-tourism and residential projects in the area.

In Camarines Norte, the 49th Infantry Battalion’s “Peace and Development Teams” (PDTs) disrupt the once tranquil lives of the people of Labo town’s 13 barrios – Domagmang, Malaya, Malibago, Malatap, Anameam, Macogon, Bagong Silang II, Pag-asa, Maligaya, Calabasa, Excivan, Daguit, and Maot.

Likewise, 12 villages in the town of Bato in Camarines Sur likewise suffer the afflictions of military presence. The villages of Payak, Pagatpatan, Sooc, Cotmon, Cristo Rey, Coguit, Mangga, Lubong, Salvacion, Cawacagan, Del Rosario, and Caricot have also been rounded up by the Philippine Army’s 42nd IB for Oplan Bayanihan’s storm of repression.

Villages in the towns of San Miguel, San Andres, and Virac in Catanduanes province share the same fate, as well as those in the boundaries of Bulusan and Barcelona towns in the province of Sorsogon, who have soldiers from the 31st IB occupying their barangays since September of 2012.

Needless to say, the AFP’s dismal human rights record makes its prolonged presence troubling on the part of villagers. A mere day of government soldiers raking through the countryside already spells fear and anxiety on the farmers to go to their lands, they being accosted with brusque, physical harm, and assaults to their livelihoods such as the stealing of crops and fowls from unguarded farms - thus equating military operations to loss of livelihoods.

But to simply paint a picture of menacing military patrols in the hinterlands of rural villages is to downplay the intent of Oplan Bayanihan’s focused terror. Despite the 9th ID’s platitudes on “peace and development” and “respect for human rights”, the opposite is what has been taking place. Oplan Bayanihan’s so-called “people-centered approach” is designed to impress upon the peasants the harsh consequences of advocating or supporting just struggles for land, livelihood, and other democratic rights and interests.  PDTs – on the average a squad of soldiers trained in combat, intelligence, and psywar – direct their brunt primarily on peasants and members of progressive organizations in the barrios whom they suspect to be supporters of the New People’s Army (NPA).

Various forms of human rights violations assail the victims of PDTs. From intimidation to physical harm, from illegal detention to unlawful interrogation, from torture to murder – soldiers of the 9th ID have not run out of methods in repressing Bicolano masses. In the villages of Guinobatan alone, no less than 80 individuals fell prey to the 2nd IB's PDTs just on its first month in July to August of 2011.

Emelio OdeƱa, a village watchman of Barangay Balite, had a knife shoved at him by a Sgt. Mariano. Novo Otico of Barangay Pood was hit in the head and legs while under interrogation. Fellow villager Oscar Pardines was hit with a rifle’s butt and was knocked in the stomach by his interrogators led by a Corporal Carpio. Village officials of Bololo and Cabaloaon were harassed into withdrawing their opposition to the PDTs’ presence, and were forced to provide materials and construct dwellings for soldiers. Rodrigo Bosquellos, also of Barangay Balite, was interrogated and illegally detained for seven hours, during which he was also denied any legal counsel and even food. Eli Oguis, a village councilman of Cabaloaon, whom the 2nd IB put under severe interrogation in August 2011, was later found headless in the muds. The list of savagery displayed by the 2nd IB in Albay goes on but is also matched elsewhere in the region where Oplan Bayanihan’s PDTs operate.

And as if all these were not terroristic enough, the Philippine Army’s 9th ID has even placed itself in the people’s midst – stockpiling weapons and occupying public structures as their barracks, and subjugating the people in their own locales of comfort and fellowships. AFP Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Emmanuel Bautista, Oplan Bayanihan’s chief architect, must have perfected in his military experience the thrashing of a people’s dignity that he and his men are now committing human rights violations – the intimidations and tortures, the unlawful detentions and cruelties – the crushing of a people’s spirits – inside barangay halls, daycare centers, chapels, and other public establishments.

All of these makes one thing very clear: that the government’s armed forces have the least respect for International Humanitarian Law which puts a premium on the protection and security of civilians in times of armed conflict; that certainly, it is not the poor and marginalized people in the region or elsewhere that they have come for to serve and protect.

With the 9th Infantry Division adept in all the functions of a repressive tool, Bicol’s countrysides would most likely illustrate the demise of democratic aspirations, with 9th ID troops posturing as butchers, but with once stifled Bicolano masses steadily breaking away from their fetters. 


If it is peace the 9th Infantry Division aims to achieve in Oplan Bayanihan, then it has certainly succeeded in doing so, if the peace it wants is the deadening of villages and the quelling of people’s aspirations.

For indeed, in over two years of the AFP’s campaign, it has not only attacked the people through brute force. It has also pursued to deflect the minds of villagers away from the roots of poverty and conflict, and has strived to distort the people’s thinking towards Oplan Bayanihan’s incredible logic.

Oplan Bayanihan absurdly believes that people are poor only because they believe that they are poor.  Their hardship is only caused by “perceptions of relative deprivation”, and is therefore no reason to protest or take up arms. Oplan Bayanihan clearly insults the people’s judgement in dispelling concrete socio-economic and socio-political concerns such as landlessness, unemployment, and injustice as motivations for dissent and armed resistance. Nonetheless, counter-insurgency fanatics aim to simply change such “perceptions of relative deprivation” through “winning the hearts and minds” of a target community.

Psywar: Altering “Perceptions”
It is in this twisted reasoning that Peace and Development Teams (PDTs) carry out their other tasks. Apart from being initiators of brutality, another focal mission of PDTs is the bombardment of diversionary schemes and even outright lies in an attempt to clear the people’s minds of the root causes of their hardships and just means of attaining progress.

In PDT-infested villages, it is commonplace for soldiers to initiate merry-making activities such as basketball tournaments, village dances and drinking sessions as though these revelries could mask the despondency of hunger that befall peasant homes. Soldiers go around with their paintbrushes beautifying waiting sheds and barangay halls, participating in token tree-planting activities, as if colors could enhance the centuries-old crudeness of production relations in the farms. Soldiers would invite residents in a “boodle-fight” meal, and transfer meager amounts of cellphone loads to students, as though these one-time gestures could provide education for the youth. Truly, the deception of Oplan Bayanihan is as plain as a rabid dog putting on a clown’s face.

Starker forms of psywar are likewise employed. During interrogations, victims are coerced into betraying their neighbors, with PDT operators sowing intrigues in order to ruin the harmonious relationships among villagers. Those who are subjected to questioning are also photographed while being forced to hold rifles, and are made to sign blank sheets of papers. These papers would later turn out to be either waivers of human rights violations, or signed surrender documents. It is noteworthy to add that military officials make a living out of misrepresenting civilians as New People’s Army (NPA) rebel returnees. Government funds supposedly allocated for such are easily pocketed by officers, with scores of peasants from each PDT-infested village being paraded as “former NPA rebels”.

Lastly, Oplan Bayanihan implements murder as the darkest of methods in instilling in the minds of the people to cast off any thought of dissent. As in the deaths of Eli Oguis, Romero Octavo, and Dalmacio dela Punta, their killers intend to ram the grim message head-on. Also, a familiar threat that has apparently become a standard operating procedure for PDT operations resonates in village round ups across the region: “Kapag inabutan namin ang mga NPA sa bahay ninyo, idadamay namin kayo!” (If we chance upon NPAs in your homes, you will not be spared!)

And alas, such wickedness has resulted in the massacre of the Mancera family in Labo town in February of 2012, when indeed, a platoon of the 49th IB under First Lieutenant Alfie Lee killed two schoolboys and their father, and left their sister severely wounded. Such was also the fate of the Lotino family in Daraga town in Albay. Accused of being NPA supporters, village councilman Wenifredo Lotino was killed together with his wife and a nephew, and the Lotinos’ daughter suffering serious gunshot wounds. In Libmanan town in Camarines Sur, likewise suspected of supporting the NPA, three members of the Bico family, along with their employee, were killed by masked soldiers. Two other witnesses were also killed.

Completing the policy of murder would be the posse of AFP propagandists scurrying towards media organizations to peddle their lies. Oplan Bayanihan being a barrage of brutality and grand psywar, military spokespersons would instinctively disown their crimes and point to the NPA. Common too are assertions that the civilian victims are NPA rebels, or that they were caught in crossfires. Still frequently driveled is to pass off the murders as common crimes, obscuring the methodization of these state murders.

But deceit is an embarrassment shoved in the AFP’s face. Testimonies and evidences belie the falsehoods that accompany each killing, attesting even more to the inclusion of murders in Oplan Bayanihan’s menu. In the extra-judicial killing of Bayan Muna member Rodel Estrellado on February 25, 2011, military reports of his death were already brandished in the media three hours earlier than his abduction which was witnessed by the public.  In Cabaloaon councilman Ely Oguis’ case,  an entanglement of lies caught military spokespersons confused as to which claim to sustain. One military unit claimed that Oguis was killed in an encounter. Another said that he was killed by the NPA for not paying taxes. Still another declared that he was an NPA tax collector killed by his comrades for not remitting his collections. Ely Oguis was in fact last seen in the company of soldiers before his death, and neighbors disprove the military’s claim of a supposed encounter between government forces and NPA rebels. In Bulan town in Sorsogon province, no less than Cesar Habla’s family asserts that the poor farmer was killed in their presence while tending to their copra production, contrary to the 8th Scout Ranger Company’s media announcement that Habla died in an encounter with rebels.

What peace indeed. What tranquility these spell for a state that tolerates no tinge of dissent. Surely, landlords in government need no longer worry about militant peasant organizations legitimately demanding lands and agricultural advancement. Capitalist lawmakers need no longer worry about militant organizations protesting unemployment and loss of livelihoods. The state has at its disposal the ferocity and duplicity of Oplan Bayanihan, thanks to the 9th Infantry Division, to subdue a discontented people.

Peace based on justice
But decades of struggle against repressive regimes in succession have sharpened the critical minds of the people and have toughened their resolve. Experience has equipped the masses to determine the anti-people natures of one counter-insurgency campaign after another. And this is Oplan Bayanihan’s fundamental weakness – it fails to win the support of the people because it does not solve age-old problems of landlessness, grinding poverty, and injustice.

More importantly, Oplan Bayanihan is faced with a resolute fight. Early on into the PDTs’ onslaught, the people of Albay staged a series of wide protests condemning Oplan Bayanihan and demanding the pull-out of the PDTs. A significant aspect of these protests, aside from being sustained, is the gathering of collective support from various parts of the region. The people’s will to carry on with their anti-militarization campaign warms up even more as they are joined by fellow peasants across the region. These supporters may be communities also suffering from the ills of Oplan Bayanihan, or those in solidarity with the struggles of their class.

The force of a people drawn together paid off when the series of protests resulted in the Albay Provincial Board issuing a resolution requiring the PDTs to vacate public establishments. Also, the Regional Office of the Commission on Human Rights was urged by these mobilizations to conduct an investigation which led to calling for an end to the grave human rights violations being committed by the 2nd IB.

Camarines Norte’s 12 villages also enjoyed the support from different sectors across Bicol when a regional Fact Finding Mission was conducted in May 2012 to further expose the atrocities committed by the 49th IB. Also in October of 2012, a regional mobilization marched along the streets of the province’ capital to demand from the government the punishment and pull-out of the 49th IB from the villages.

Much is still to be done, as even if the 2nd IB has been compelled to build their own barracks, the soldiers continue to return to public facilities in blatant disregard of lawful decisions. Much is still to be done, as the 49th IB continues to occupy 13 barrios in Labo, and as the rest of Bicol’s countrysides continue to swell with PDTs.

While Oplan Bayanihan has three more years to go, it’s demise has already been declared by the people - a demise assured not only by Oplan Bayanihan’s inherent flaws, but most of all, by the people’s resolve to further strengthen their ranks and sustain the fight against this deadly counter-insurgency campaign alongside continuing struggles for land, livelihood, and justice. ###

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Karapatan Bicol unmasks new ID system law

             
News Release

Reference:
Vince Casilihan
Cellphone Number: 09481390488

  
February 19, 2013

A trashed adversary that comes sneaking under a new guise. This is how Karapatan Bicol describes House Bill 6895, the National ID System assuming a new name in "Filipino Identification System Act".

According to the human rights organization’s Vince Casilihan, the proposed law is nothing different from past regimes’ attempts at curtailing the right to privacy of the people. “The government may call it by any other name and under another pretext, but the main deal is that this National ID System violates the basic rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights of our constitution. It violates the individual’s right to privacy, to security of person and freedom of movement.”

Casilihan recalls that militant organizations have struggled alongside the broad majority of the people in opposing the creation of a database on each and every citizen, from the time of then President Fidel V. Ramos, and even until former President Macapagal-Arroyo tried to revive the project. “This National ID System means nothing more than a corrupt and abusive government spying on its citizens and keeping them under strict control,” said Casilihan.