Jan 31 2008
A Return to the Marcos Era?
by Sophie Richardson
Late last year, Philip Alston, the United Nations special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings, released his final report on the
That’s when President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s declaration of an “all-out war” against the New People’s Army insurgency was interpreted by the Armed Forces of the
Although the Arroyo government has repeatedly denied that extrajudicial killings are its policy, it has done little to alter that perception. Instead of publicly reiterating that the peaceful expression of political views is the right of all Filipinos, President Arroyo and members of her government continue to describe nongovernmental organizations as “front groups” for the New People’s Army.
While the New People’s Army has long been responsible for serious abuses, including kidnapping and murder, that does not justify the military’s rampant rights violations. Many of the reported killings implicate members of the armed forces. For instance, Human Rights Watch documented the killing of Pastor Andy Pawikan, a lay preacher who was killed by a group of soldiers in broad daylight while holding his baby daughter. The soldiers, who moments after killing Pastor Pawikan handed the blood-soaked but otherwise unharmed infant back to her mother, made the absurd claim that they had to shoot the preacher because he resisted arrest.
In response to growing international criticism, President Arroyo introduced a flurry of measures throughout 2007 to address the extrajudicial killings: fast-tracking cases through specially-designated courts, establishing a human-rights office within the Armed Forces, setting up a high-level commission of inquiry. But not only have these steps accomplished little—and it is not clear that they are aimed at anything more than window-dressing—they fail to address the core problem: Not a single member of the military has been prosecuted, let alone convicted, for any of these killings.
President Arroyo has suggested that the killings are a result of misbehavior by rogue officials, of local political violence, or, as the military likes to insist, as a result of intra-insurgency purges. Yet Mr. Alston’s U.N. report and Human Rights Watch’s own findings show not only how shallow these explanations are, but also how the military, with the support of the Arroyo administration, has systematically distorted a counterinsurgency agenda and sought to apply it to peaceful government critics.
The similarities to the Marcos era are remarkable, not only in the Philippine military’s expropriation of civilian power, but also in
Pentagon officials claim that they have consistently raised concerns about the extrajudicial killings, but there is no public evidence of this. It is unclear whether the
Most alarming, the
When will
Ms. Richardson is
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