A year after illegal arrest
Groups clamor for
detained poet’s release
NUPL files motion for immediate resolution of Ericson Acosta
case before DOJ
Press Release
February
13, 2012
A year after the
illegal arrest of poet and former UP Collegian editor Ericson Acosta,
his family, colleagues, human rights advocates and supporters “demand
nothing less than his immediate and unconditional release.”
“Ericson’s sense of
responsibility as Iskolar ng Bayan has led him to work in the
grassroots and create art with the people. (His) right to participate
productively as a free citizen of this country is violated each day he
remains in detention,” read a statement released by the Free Ericson
Acosta Campaign (FEAC) in a press conference and music jam at the
University of the Philippines Palma Hall lobby last Friday, February
10.
The event was
organized by the All-UP Academic Employees Union and Acosta’s former
colleagues at the university, and was attended by prominent Filipino
cultural icons – US-based cultural critic and thinker Prof. Epifanio
San Juan, Jr.; women’s studies author Delia Aguilar; award-winning
scriptwriter and author Ricky Lee; actress, screen writer and UP
Regent Bibeth Orteza; UP College of Mass Communications Dean and
popular culture critic Roland Tolentino; and protest songwriter and
poet Jess Santiago, among others.
“The illegal arrest
and continued unjust detention of cultural worker Ericson Acosta is
concrete proof of the existence of political prisoners. There is
nothing righteous with having our artists like Acosta suffer in
incarceration,” Samahan ng Ex-Detainees Laban sa Detensyon at Aresto (SELDA)
Secretary-General Angie Ipong said in a news release.
Acosta was arrested
without warrant by the military on February 13, 2011, in Brgy. Bay-ang,
San Jorge, Samar just because the laptop he carried roused the
suspicion of soldiers. Due to serious irregularities and rights abuses
in the conduct of his arrest, his counsel led by Atty. Jun Oliva of
the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL), filed a Petition for
Review before the DOJ in September 2011, and moved to defer court
proceeding spending resolution of the said petition. Ideally, a review
petition should be resolved within 60 days.
“It is important for
us to bear witness to the truth of the injustice done to Acosta,”
Prof. E. San Juan, Jr. said.
Exactly a year after
Acosta’s illegal arrest, the NUPL will today file a motion for the
immediate resolution of the Review Petition. Aside from difficulties
faced by his family after Acosta’s detention in Samar, they also
protest continued military harassment and intimidation by troopers
from the 8th ID deployed within the jail facility.
“Instead of settling
for a stable, well-paying job, or going abroad like his brothers, our
son Ericson chose to teach literacy and work for the oppressed in
far-flung provinces. Something is terribly wrong when he is made to
suffer a year in prison for doing what he thinks is right,” lamented
Acosta’s father Isaias, who is now in his late ‘70s.
Acosta was named
finalist of the 2011 Imprisoned Artist Prize at the Freedom to Create
Awards Festival in Cape Town South Africa last November, along with
imprisoned artists from
Burma
and Tibet. Various human rights groups and cultural institutions,
including the Amnesty International, Campaign for Human Rights in the
Philippines-United
Kingdom, University Council of UP Diliman, National Commission for
Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and the Philippine Center of the
International PEN (Poets, Essayists, Novelists) support the call for
his release.
“Even if it has
become dangerous to integrate with the masses, the scholars of the
nation know it has to be done,” Dean Roland Tolentino said in his
speech at the UP. Acosta’s songs and writings from prison is posted
by the Free Ericson Acosta Campaign in his JAILHOUSE BLOG (http://www.acostaprisondiary.blogspot.com).
Pictures can be downloaded from the Free Ericson Acosta Facebook page
and campaign blog (http://www.freeacosta.blogspot.com).