Duterte regime’s
proscription petition targets critics, rights defenders
By
KARAPATAN
March 9, 2018
QUEZON CITY –
Karapatan condemns the listing of more than 600 persons, human
rights defenders and critics of the Duterte government in the
proscription petition filed by the Department of Justice (DOJ),
through Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Peter Ong, at a regional
court in Manila on February 21, 2018. The petition not only seeks to
declare the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA)
as terrorist organizations but also named individuals as their
supposed leaders or members, including those who are dead, missing
and members of paramilitary units accused of killing Lumads in
Mindanao.
“There is no doubt that
the filing of the petition is an effort to sow fear and panic among
Duterte's supposed detractors, subjectively prepare the public for
more intense political repression, and be the front act of a
crackdown against the dictator wannabe's critics. The list of
leaders and members is a take-off from the Order of Battle (OB)
lists of the Gloria Arroyo and Noynoy Aquino regimes," said
Karapatan Secretary General Cristina E. Palabay.
She recalled that persons
listed in the OB often ended up arrested based on false charges,
incarcerated and even tortured, missing or killed. “Not only do such
lists incite human rights violations, they also legitimize and make
"normal" to the public the government's abuse of power in
suppressing dissent and decimating the supposed ‘enemies of the
state’,” she stated.
Victoria Tauli Corpuz, UN
Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples and former
Chair of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, is among the
named individuals in the petition. “This is a clear case of reprisal
from Malacanang for Corpuz’s expressed concern over possible cases
of human rights violations due to the imposition of martial law in
Mindanao. She and another UN SR released a statement in response to
a letter of allegation submitted by Karapatan to her office,”
Palabay commented.
In the list also are human
rights defenders who have been in the forefront of defending and
protecting human and people’s rights like Elisa Tita Lubi, Karapatan
National Executive Committee member and former interim Regional
Coordinator of the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development
(APWLD).
Also named in the petition
are Joan Carling, past Secretary General of the Asian Indigenous
Peoples’ Pact (AIPP) and former member of the UN Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues; Atty. Jose Molintas, former member of the UN
Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP);
Beverly Longid, Global Coordinator of the International Indigenous
Peoples Movement for Self-Determination and Liberation (IPMSDL);
Sandugo Co-Chairperson Joanna Cariño; Cordillera People’s Alliance
(CPA) Chairperson Windel Bolinget; and at least 10 Lumad datu/leaders
in Northern and Southern Mindanao. Even more unbelievable is the
inclusion in the list of the names of the nine-member Karapatan
quick reaction team arrested in November 2017 and HR defenders in
Negros.
While National Democratic
Front of the Philippines (NDFP) as an organization was omitted in
the proscription, those involved in the peace talks between the GRP
and NDFP were listed like Peace Panel members Coni Ledesma, Juliet
de Lima and Benito Tiamzon; Chief Political Consultant Jose Maria
Sison; Senior Adviser Luis Jalandoni; Wilma Austria-Tiamzon and at
least 20 other peace consultants; and former Bayan Muna Rep. Satur
Ocampo, independent cooperator.
The Karapatan leader also
said that the list is “severely defective as it contains scores of
aliases (aka), John and Jane Does so any person can be added later."
"The list also contains
seven names of paramilitary group members including four from the
New Indigenous Peoples' Army (NIPAR), led by Alde "Butchoy" Salusad,
who have standing warrants for the killing of Lumad leader Datu
Jimmy Liguyon. They also have been presented and paid as
surrenderees, consistent to their being all-purpose pawns in the
military's repressive schemes,” Palabay said.
“On the whole, DOJ’s
proscription petition is dubious and a maneuver meant to harass,
target and criminalize persons in progressive organizations. We
should oppose this and other tyrannical acts that brand legitimate
dissent and activism as ‘terrorism.’ What should be addressed
instead is Duterte’s brand of state terrorism, which has victimized
thousands. Indeed, shouldn't Duterte be branded instead as the
number 1 terrorist?” Palabay concluded.