From the CPP Website (Sep 1): Recent arrest of another NDFP Peace Consultant, in further spite of the peace process
Alan Jazmines
Consultant
NDFP National Democratic Front of the Philippines
The National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) and various local and international organizations pushing for the peace process have intently been pressing on with their efforts towards genuine, lasting peace through the attainment of mutual agreements, fundamental socio-economic and political-constitutional changes, and serious end to hostilities.
The Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GPH) – - in particular, as of late on the part of the present Aquino regime – - has, on the contrary, treacherously been continuing with its belittling and grave disregard of (to the extent of intently trampling upon) agreements already made from the onset and through the course of the NDFP-GPH peace talks.
This, even in the case of agreements quite crucial to the continuation and progress of the peace process, such as the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL) and the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees (JASIG). The CARHRIHL is supposed to ensure the respect and protection on both sides in the ongoing civil strife in the country. The JASIG is supposed to ensure that peace consultants and staffs of both sides are protected from surveillance, arrest, detention, prosecution and other antagonistic acts that would violate their rights as well as deter their effective participation and work in the peace process.
Yet, the military, paramilitary, police and intelligence forces of the GPH have without let-up been surveilling, arresting, detaining, swamping with trumped-up criminal charges and violating the human, legal and other rights of NDFP peace consultants and other JASIG-protected NDFP forces the GPH forces can lay their hands on.
The latest NDFP peace consultant who has been subjected to such traitorous acts of the GPH forces has been Ma. Loida Magpatoc, an NDFP peace consultant representing the NDFP in Far South Mindanao.
Magpatoc is 52 years old, married and a “Lola” to five grandchildren.
Despite her being JASIG-protected, a P500,000.00 reward was put up by the Armed Forces of the Philippines for her capture.
In performance of her work as an NDFP peace consultant, Magpatoc had been immersing and consulting with the local community folk in the barangays of Far South Mindanao in regard to land, production and other socio-economic and political issues, when the 1002nd Brigade (1002ND Bde) of the 10th Infantry Division of the Philippine Army (10th ID PA) got wind of her presence in Brgy. Zone III, Digos, Davao del Sur and came to arrest her as early as 4am last July 28.
The entire local community, however, immediately learned of the situation and came out en masse to protect her and block the 1002nd Bde. Magpatoc presented her JASIG Document of Information to the 1002nd Bde and claimed her protection from arrest.
But the 1002nd Bde only confiscated her JASIG document, ignored her claim for protection from arrest, and insisted on proceeding to arrest her. The barangay folk, who were surrounding her, refused to let the 1002nd Bde forces take her, as the former were apprehensive that the latter would only commit foul deeds against her. Magpatoc and the barangay folk asked if there was a warrant for her arrest, but the 1002nd Bde forces were not able to present any.
The arrest was eventually made, however, when the Philippine National Police (PNP) in Davao del Sur came later in the day to take her, this time armed with warrant of arrest (based on trumped-up criminal charges of “robbery,” “damage to properties” and “double homicide”), and bring her to their Digos headquarters. From there, she was flown on August 4 to Metro Manila and brought for confinement at the Taguig City Jail Female Dormitory in Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig City.
After her arrest, the reward for Ma. Loida Magpatoc’s capture by the AFP, suddenly became P5.6 million.
Alan Jazmines
NDFP peace consultant
detained at the
Special intensive Care Area,
Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig City
02 September 2013
http://www.philippinerevolution.net/statements/20130901_recent-arrest-of-another-ndfp-peace-consultant-in-further-spite-of-the-peace-process
The government holds that it is the responsibility of the CPP/NDF to clearly identify (with photos and real names) those of its members that it wants covered by the JASIG agreement.
ReplyDeleteHere is an excerpt from an OPAPP statement from August of last year:
"NDF to be faulted for failed verification process"
GPH Panel Chair Alex Padilla clarified yesterday that he did not terminate or suspend the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees. He merely stated the obvious that due to the failure of both Panels to verify the identities of the persons using aliases in the NDF's list of alleged JASIG-protected persons, there is no way to verify their claim that the 13 personalities it wants to release under the JASIG are indeed in the JASIG list.
“With no verification, there can be no JASIG protection,” Padilla said, explaining that all the government holds is a list of aliases, with no real names to match. “But the JASIG remains operative for the persons whose real names are listed as JASIG-protected.” He added: “If we had rendered the JASIG inoperative, Louie Jalandoni and Coni Ledesma would not be able to go freely around the country as they are doing now.”
The debate on the JASIG followed the failure of the verification process in Utrecht, The Netherlands on 26 July 2011. The process entailed opening of the safety deposit box in which NDF stored in 2003 the photos and matching aliases of their alleged JASIG-covered consultants. But the photos were encrypted in diskettes and could not be read, even with the use of their own decrypting software. It became necessary for both sides to verify the NDF’s claims when the NDF refused to hold bilateral or formal negotiations unless government released most if not all of the persons in its list of alleged JASIG-protected consultants.
“In the first place, they should have not used encrypted diskettes to store the pictures since the JASIG called for individual photographs,” Padilla said. “Then their diskettes could not be opened. The failure of the verification process was entirely the fault of the NDF....”
Padilla pointed out, “The JASIG stands, but obviously, those whose aliases cannot be verified cannot be covered.”
- See more at: http://opapp.gov.ph/cpp-npa-ndf/news/ndf-be-faulted-failed-verification-process#sthash.ZOVCP6iI.dpuf