From InterAksyon (Sep 24): Hero ex-Scout Ranger sergeant pines for retirement benefits
Sgt. Jose Tubil (in wheelchair) flanked by Scout Rangers from the 3rd Scout Ranger Battalion led by its Commanding Officer Lt. Col. Elmer B. Suderio (standing 4th from right) during a visit to bring him cash and donations in kind. Photo from AFP-PAO
Ex-Scout Ranger Sergeant Jose Tubil, an awardee of the Distinguished Conduct Star for leading his men in combat, has appealed to concerned officials of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) to allow him to retire so that he can claim his benefits after 31 years in service.
In 1998, Sergeant Tubil led 17 members of the Citizen Armed Force Geographical Unit (CAFGU) to reinforce a cornered team of police officers at a firefight that resulted in the demise of the demise of an Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) founder in Barangay Tumakid, Lamitan City, Basilan.
During that firefight, Tubil and his men killed Abdujarak Abubakar Janjalani and his assistant. Janjalani was the elder brother of his successor, Khadaffy Janjalani, who also perished in an encounter with government forces in September 2006 in Patikul, Sulu.
Tubil, who is turning 58 years old this coming December, uses a wheelchair because of wounds sustained in an ambush by lawless elements in 2008, also in Lamitan City.
"He fought off his attackers and killed three of them using only a pistol," relates Lt Col. Harold Cabunoc, former Public Affairs Office chief of the AFP.
Cabunoc said he and Tubil had spent time together in many southern Mindanao armed clashes.
Tubil laments that the processing of his retirement papers has been stalled after he applied for compulsory retirement on December 1, 2014 at the office of the chief of staff of the Army's 1st Infantry Division because of three "missing" Garand rifles.
According to Tubil, he forgot to make an accounting of the three rifles issued to his three CAFGU elements but had officially turned over these to his successor.
Division commander Maj. Gen. Gerardo Barrientos said he would check into Tubil's case with his chief of staff.
"I acknowledge it was my lapse and my responsibility. And my successor at the time did not bother to vouch that the guns were still with the three CAFGU man. But, please, I'm asking concerned officers not to deny me my retirement benefits because of this. If I have to pay for the 'lost' guns, then I'll pay for them after receiving my lump-sum retirement pay. I want my retirement to be in order. I deserve it," he said, in Tagalog.
Tubil's Distinguished Conduct Star, the second highest military award for heroism from the battlefield, was given to him personally by then President Joseph Estrada.
Tubil recalled he quickly gathered his 17 CAFGU elements after they heard automatic gunfire about a kilometer away from their detachment.
"We quickly reached the position of the pinned down policemen and saw their leader, a chief inspector and another one, already dead. Some of them were seriously wounded and running out of ammunition. I commanded the still able cops to secure their casualties and we will take care of the enemy. I broke my unit into four teams, quickly drew the assault maneuvers and the battle raged again," Tubil said.
Equally armed with M14 and Garand riffles as the enemy, Tubil's men outmaneuvered the enemy and killed their leader and his assistant. He said the bandits were forced to withdraw with their wounded companions and left behind their two dead leaders.
"The autopsy reports proved that the bullets taken out of the bodies were from our M14 and Garand rifles. The policemen that we reinforced were armed with M16 and pistols. After the bandits fled, my battalion commander ordered us to just let the police bring them to the municipal hall," Tubil further recalled.
"That's the real story," he added.
"He is a veteran of various campaigns against lawless elements both in Basilan and Sulu," Cabunoc says of Tubil. "He is now practically in hiding due to grave threats to his life. He could not walk and has endured life's struggles because of his unprocessed retirement papers."
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/117975/hero-ex-scout-ranger-sergeant-pines-for-retirement-benefits
Saturday, September 26, 2015
AFP chief mum on whether Sulu-based group is behind Samal Island kidnapping
From CNN-Philippines (Sep 25): AFP chief mum on whether Sulu-based group is behind Samal Island kidnapping
Armed Forces chief Gen. Hernando Iriberri attended a more than four-hour briefing at the Eastern Mindanao Command headquarters in Davao City, which was attended by top military officials in the region. (File photo)
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief Gen. Hernando Iriberri refused to comment when asked by reporters on Friday (September 25) if a new kidnap for ransom group based in Sulu was behind the kidnapping of the three foreigners and a Filipina at a resort onSamal Island
last Monday evening (September 21).
http://cnnphilippines.com/regional/2015/09/25/AFP-chief-Hernando-Iriberri-Sulu-based-group-behind-Samal-Island-kidnapping.html
Armed Forces chief Gen. Hernando Iriberri attended a more than four-hour briefing at the Eastern Mindanao Command headquarters in Davao City, which was attended by top military officials in the region. (File photo)
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief Gen. Hernando Iriberri refused to comment when asked by reporters on Friday (September 25) if a new kidnap for ransom group based in Sulu was behind the kidnapping of the three foreigners and a Filipina at a resort on
The question was
raised after reports of an intelligence information claiming that the
kidnappers and their victims arrived onboard a white speedboat in Barangay
Kaunayan in Patikul, Sulu at around 12:30 p.m. last Tuesday (September 22)—
about 13 hours after the abduction at Holiday Oceanview Samal Resort on Samal Island .
“Chini-check pa
natin kung ano ba talagang grupo. Kasama
yan sa lahat ng kino-collate at
tinitignan natin. Alam niyo naman first
time nangyari yan dito,” Irriberi
said.
The intelligence
report claimed that a group from the village
of Tanum in Patikul, Sulu
— known as a lair of the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) — was behind the kidnapping of
Canadian nationals John Ridsdel and Robert Hall, Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad,
and Filipina Marithes Flor.
Allegedly, the
same intelligence report mentioned that there was an impending kidnapping days
before it was perpetrated.
This spurred
questions on whether the incident was a failure on the part of the authorities
to take prompt action, but Iriberri refused to confirm or deny the information.
Earlier, Eastern
Mindanao Command (EastMinCom) commander Lt. Gen. Aurelio Baladad was quoted
saying that a lawless group from Sulu could have possibly planned and
masterminded the abduction. But Baladad was quick to clarify that the group is
separate from the ASG.
Irriberi was
careful in divulging any information that they have so far.
The AFP chief
also refused to give any details of their operation saying that it is essential
to the success of the rescue mission led by the Philippine National Police
(PNP).
“Pakiusap nga namin we should not even talk
about anything operational, intelligence, because it could have an impact
adversely... So I hope you understand that we cannot give you anything about
operational matters,” said Irriberi.
Irriberri,
however, assured the public that the military and the police are doing their
best to rescue the kidnapped victims.
“We have very
good commanders here, he have competent commanders,” he said.
“So lahat ina-assess, bina-validate, ini-evaluate,
lahat ng information na pumapasok. We are taking everything based
on the information that we receive.”
Iriberri attended
a more than four-hour briefing at the EastMinCom headquarters in Davao City ,
which was attended by top military officials in the region.
http://cnnphilippines.com/regional/2015/09/25/AFP-chief-Hernando-Iriberri-Sulu-based-group-behind-Samal-Island-kidnapping.html
China Completes Runway in Spratly Islands: IHS Jane's Defense Weekly
From NBC News (Sep 25): China Completes Runway in Spratly Islands: IHS Jane's Defense Weekly
China has completed the construction of a two-mile runway on one of the artificial islands it built in the hotly-contested South China Sea, according to satellite images released Friday by a monitoring group.
The release came on the same day President Barack Obama was to host Chinese President Xi Jinping for his first official visit to the U.S. The issue of the islands has been a source of tension between the U.S. and China.
The images, published by IHS Jane's Defence Weekly, appeared to show China is near to making operational the 3,125-meter landing strip on Fiery Cross Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands.
According to IHS Jane's, the landing strip would allow China to "accelerate construction on the new island and to start patrols over the disputed islands."
The satellite images showed the runway was only completed in recent weeks, the military publication said.
Chinese construction workers continued to build other structures on the artificially reclaimed island, as well as seawalls, road networks and dumping topsoil — possibly an attempt to grow food there, according to Jane's.
China has reclaimed land on at least half a dozen reefs in the archipelago in an apparent attempt to assert its territorial claims in the South China Sea. This has rattled other nations — such as the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan — with overlapping claims in the waters.
China said last week that it was "extremely concerned" at the suggestion by a top U.S. commander that American ships and aircraft should challenge China's claim by patrolling close to the islands.
CNES 2015, Distribution Airbus DS / ©2015 IHS: 1640203
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/china-completes-runway-controversial-spratly-islands-project-n433646
China has completed the construction of a two-mile runway on one of the artificial islands it built in the hotly-contested South China Sea, according to satellite images released Friday by a monitoring group.
The release came on the same day President Barack Obama was to host Chinese President Xi Jinping for his first official visit to the U.S. The issue of the islands has been a source of tension between the U.S. and China.
The images, published by IHS Jane's Defence Weekly, appeared to show China is near to making operational the 3,125-meter landing strip on Fiery Cross Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands.
According to IHS Jane's, the landing strip would allow China to "accelerate construction on the new island and to start patrols over the disputed islands."
The satellite images showed the runway was only completed in recent weeks, the military publication said.
China has reclaimed land on at least half a dozen reefs in the archipelago in an apparent attempt to assert its territorial claims in the South China Sea. This has rattled other nations — such as the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan — with overlapping claims in the waters.
China said last week that it was "extremely concerned" at the suggestion by a top U.S. commander that American ships and aircraft should challenge China's claim by patrolling close to the islands.
CNES 2015, Distribution Airbus DS / ©2015 IHS: 1640203
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/china-completes-runway-controversial-spratly-islands-project-n433646
Opinion: Read the ‘lumad’ lips
Interesting Opinion piece posted to the "Get Real" column of Solita Collas-Monsod in the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Sep 26): Read the ‘lumad’ lips
It turns out that on Nov. 12, 2014, at the Tribal Hall in Sitio Patil, Barangay Gupitan, Kapalong, Davao del Norte, 42 tribal leaders of the Langilan Manobo tribe, including 23 datus, signed a resolution “declaring the New People’s Army (NPA) and its allied Civil Society Organizations (CSO) such that of (sic) Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), National Democratic Front (NDF) and Karadyawan-Kapalong, Karapatan-Davao, Pasaka Regional Lumad Conference, Radyo ni Juan-Tagum and Mindanao Interfaith Services Foundation (MISFI) pas persona non grata.”
There followed a long list of 10 “whereas-es,” delineating the reasons for their stance, and a two-page attachment which further described 24 willful violations by the NPA and the allied CSOs of the six pillars of the Langilan Manobo tribe’s principles (Indigenous Beliefs Practices, Indigenous Knowledge and Education Practices, Customary Governance and Leadership, Traditional Economic and Health, Customary Defense and Security and Ancestral Territory).
Here are some of their grievances against the leftist groups: The NPA “forcibly told” the tribal elders that there are 10 sitios the NPA had already occupied, and the tribal leaders could do nothing about it; when Datu Bangu Bolyong put a boundary between his people and the NPA, the NPA told him that no one can prevent them, because all the mountains are theirs; the NPA threatened the residents of Sitios Kapatagan, Tawngatok and Patil with attacks—one in the morning, one at lunch, and one at dinner, respectively—if these residents didn’t “okey us.”
In a description eerily reminiscent of what happened in Haran, Davao City, the tribal leaders cited an incident which happened in March 2014 in Davao City, in which they accused the NPA and CSOs of “exploiting them to stage a demonstration or rallies at Davao City without the consent of the true and authentic indigenous leadership in the indigenous people’s communities where they came from.”
What these Langilan Manobo tribal leaders said obviously fell on deaf ears—unfortunately, both the government’s and the leftists’—because the Haran incident happened, and the exploitation of the lumad continues unabated. Read the lumad lips, Reader. They don’t want the NPA and their civil society allies to speak for them; they don’t want the “help” of the NPA and their civil society allies.
So why are the media full of stories spun by these CSO allies of the NPA, about how the lumad are suffering from military heavy-handedness? If not military, then paramilitary supposedly organized by the military, so they are one and the same. Why is it that the leftist version is so quickly adopted, and the lumad version ignored?
And if we are to ask the lumad, who would they prefer to go to bed with, the NPAs or the military/government forces? If they are to be made to choose, it seems they would choose the latter.
Here is the “United Stand of Talaingod Tribal Leaders” signed in the Tribal Hall, JBL Complex, Barangay Sto. NiƱo, Talaingod, Davao del Norte, on May 4, 2015, by 52 datus, among others. They are another group of lumad, but they have similar stories—that of exploitation by the NPA and its civil society allies.
The Talaingod statement talks about an education system that has been subverted by the NPA, and gives the specific example of one Asinad Bago, who has testified that the students in the Salugpungan Ta’tanu Igkanogon Community Learning Center (STICLC) are being taught to hate the government, and are being indoctrinated by the NPA, taught revolutionary songs, and taken out of class to join rallies in Davao and Arakan. (I think it was this boy who was interviewed by Tina Monzon Palma, and he sang our national anthem to different, rebel words.) The NPA, he said, had free access to the school. The boy has tried to transfer to a Department of Education school, but his report card was not released by the STICLC.
It is these STICLC supervisors who accused the 68th Infantry Battalion of harassment in Sitio Nasilaban in Barangay Palma Gil. But their charges were found to be baseless by the barangay council. And the tribal leaders staunchly back the military presence and its help to the community.
Also, the tribal leaders want the STICLC to be run by the DepEd, and it should be. Clearly, the tribal leaders have made their choice between the government and the NPA administrators.
My analysis: The ancestral land of the lumad is prime land—for logging and mining activities. The NPA wants control of it, and so, of course, do corporations interested in these activities. They may or may not be in collusion. But the NPA sees the lumad as ripe for exploitation—and among the first things it is tackling is the education of the lumad. He who controls the minds of the young will eventually control the community.
So the NPA is trying to take over the education, and even the cultural practices, of the lumad. The military is the only one standing in its way. So it must be dealt with. Thus come the charges of “militarization” and “enemies of the people.” Hogwash.
The NPA, according to the lumad, has killed 357 lumad between 1998 and 2008. No one is doubting the accuracy of that statement. The military, according to the NPA, has killed 50 lumad during P-Noy’s watch. The only question is: Are these lumad, or are these NPA wolves in lumad clothing?
Clearly, the lumad know what the game is. One can only hope that the rest of the Filipino people are just as intelligent.
http://opinion.inquirer.net/88867/read-the-lumad-lips
It turns out that on Nov. 12, 2014, at the Tribal Hall in Sitio Patil, Barangay Gupitan, Kapalong, Davao del Norte, 42 tribal leaders of the Langilan Manobo tribe, including 23 datus, signed a resolution “declaring the New People’s Army (NPA) and its allied Civil Society Organizations (CSO) such that of (sic) Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), National Democratic Front (NDF) and Karadyawan-Kapalong, Karapatan-Davao, Pasaka Regional Lumad Conference, Radyo ni Juan-Tagum and Mindanao Interfaith Services Foundation (MISFI) pas persona non grata.”
There followed a long list of 10 “whereas-es,” delineating the reasons for their stance, and a two-page attachment which further described 24 willful violations by the NPA and the allied CSOs of the six pillars of the Langilan Manobo tribe’s principles (Indigenous Beliefs Practices, Indigenous Knowledge and Education Practices, Customary Governance and Leadership, Traditional Economic and Health, Customary Defense and Security and Ancestral Territory).
Here are some of their grievances against the leftist groups: The NPA “forcibly told” the tribal elders that there are 10 sitios the NPA had already occupied, and the tribal leaders could do nothing about it; when Datu Bangu Bolyong put a boundary between his people and the NPA, the NPA told him that no one can prevent them, because all the mountains are theirs; the NPA threatened the residents of Sitios Kapatagan, Tawngatok and Patil with attacks—one in the morning, one at lunch, and one at dinner, respectively—if these residents didn’t “okey us.”
In a description eerily reminiscent of what happened in Haran, Davao City, the tribal leaders cited an incident which happened in March 2014 in Davao City, in which they accused the NPA and CSOs of “exploiting them to stage a demonstration or rallies at Davao City without the consent of the true and authentic indigenous leadership in the indigenous people’s communities where they came from.”
What these Langilan Manobo tribal leaders said obviously fell on deaf ears—unfortunately, both the government’s and the leftists’—because the Haran incident happened, and the exploitation of the lumad continues unabated. Read the lumad lips, Reader. They don’t want the NPA and their civil society allies to speak for them; they don’t want the “help” of the NPA and their civil society allies.
So why are the media full of stories spun by these CSO allies of the NPA, about how the lumad are suffering from military heavy-handedness? If not military, then paramilitary supposedly organized by the military, so they are one and the same. Why is it that the leftist version is so quickly adopted, and the lumad version ignored?
And if we are to ask the lumad, who would they prefer to go to bed with, the NPAs or the military/government forces? If they are to be made to choose, it seems they would choose the latter.
Here is the “United Stand of Talaingod Tribal Leaders” signed in the Tribal Hall, JBL Complex, Barangay Sto. NiƱo, Talaingod, Davao del Norte, on May 4, 2015, by 52 datus, among others. They are another group of lumad, but they have similar stories—that of exploitation by the NPA and its civil society allies.
The Talaingod statement talks about an education system that has been subverted by the NPA, and gives the specific example of one Asinad Bago, who has testified that the students in the Salugpungan Ta’tanu Igkanogon Community Learning Center (STICLC) are being taught to hate the government, and are being indoctrinated by the NPA, taught revolutionary songs, and taken out of class to join rallies in Davao and Arakan. (I think it was this boy who was interviewed by Tina Monzon Palma, and he sang our national anthem to different, rebel words.) The NPA, he said, had free access to the school. The boy has tried to transfer to a Department of Education school, but his report card was not released by the STICLC.
It is these STICLC supervisors who accused the 68th Infantry Battalion of harassment in Sitio Nasilaban in Barangay Palma Gil. But their charges were found to be baseless by the barangay council. And the tribal leaders staunchly back the military presence and its help to the community.
Also, the tribal leaders want the STICLC to be run by the DepEd, and it should be. Clearly, the tribal leaders have made their choice between the government and the NPA administrators.
My analysis: The ancestral land of the lumad is prime land—for logging and mining activities. The NPA wants control of it, and so, of course, do corporations interested in these activities. They may or may not be in collusion. But the NPA sees the lumad as ripe for exploitation—and among the first things it is tackling is the education of the lumad. He who controls the minds of the young will eventually control the community.
So the NPA is trying to take over the education, and even the cultural practices, of the lumad. The military is the only one standing in its way. So it must be dealt with. Thus come the charges of “militarization” and “enemies of the people.” Hogwash.
The NPA, according to the lumad, has killed 357 lumad between 1998 and 2008. No one is doubting the accuracy of that statement. The military, according to the NPA, has killed 50 lumad during P-Noy’s watch. The only question is: Are these lumad, or are these NPA wolves in lumad clothing?
Clearly, the lumad know what the game is. One can only hope that the rest of the Filipino people are just as intelligent.
http://opinion.inquirer.net/88867/read-the-lumad-lips
NOT JUST THE LUMAD | Rights groups say Cagayan Valley IPs also suffering from military abuses
From InterAksyon (Sep 26): NOT JUST THE LUMAD | Rights groups say Cagayan Valley IPs also suffering from military abuses
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/118028/not-just-the-lumad--rights-groups-say-cagayan-valley-ips-also-suffering-from-military-abuses
The killings, forced evacuations and other atrocities
suffered by Mindanao’s lumad have been hogging the headlines for weeks
but human rights groups say indigenous people in the Cagayan Valley
have also been suffering from alleged abuses by the military since 2006.
A report prepared by the Cagayan chapter of the human rights
group Karapatan on a recent fact-finding mission in the Zinundungan Valley
showed the abuses endured by the Malaweg, Aggay and Kalinga communities in the
area have worsened and intensified since January this year.
The report documented the harassment, torture and summary
executions of IP leaders as well as officers of the Timpuyog Dagiti
Mannalon nga Aggay, or TDMA, allegedly by troops of the Army’s 17th
Infantry Battalion, which is under the 5th Infantry Division.
The scale of the abuses, the report said, “approaches the
bloody level of human rights abuses committed against the indigenous lumad of
Mindanao .”
Residents said the military increased its presence in the Zinundungan Valley after the New People’s Army
captured and punished military intelligence agents and a member of the Citizens
Armed Forces Geographical Unit.
“The civilians have become the targets for revenge by the
17th IB after the NPA-Danilo Ben Command imposed the death penalty on the two
military intelligence operatives of the 17th IB and their CAFGU asset,” the
report said.
Citing a statement from the NPA unit’s spokesman, it said
the intelligence agents were found to have “linked farmers and their legitimate
organizations with the NPA. The NPA secured the hit list prepared by the
military agents. All of those listed ended up in the ‘Order of Battle’ of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines ,
with some of them killed or disappeared.”
Aside from Karapatan and TDMA, the mission was joined by
other people’s organizations, religious and officials of Barangays Masi, San Juan and Bural in
Rizal town.
Residents of the valley told the mission, held September 16
to 19, that they have been struggling for land, resources and their lives and
demanding that government provide them basic services since the 1970s.
“Whenever we triumph in making our lives better, the
military comes to suppress us and violate our human rights,” they said.
In 2006, they said, San Juan Sangguniang Kabataan chairman
Nelson Azucena was murdered by the military. In July 2011, Vicente Agbayani, a
member of the Aggay tribe, was tortured and then slapped with trumped-up
charges. And in 2013, troops of the 21st Infantry Battalion killed
farmer-leader Ronald Beran.
“Every year, the list of those murdered, arrested, kidnapped
and tortured lengthens, along with other forms of human rights violations.
Until now, justice has not been rendered to the victims,” the residents said.
The mission documented human rights violations allegedly
committed by the 17th IB against know farmer-leaders and residents in Barangays
Masi, Bural and San Juan
in Rizal, and in Barangay Lipatan, Sto. Nino.
Among the other human rights violations blamed on the 17th
IB that the mission documented were:
Kidnapping, illegal arrest and torture of Aggay leader Mendo
Bisiotan and fellow Aggay Marlon Baganay and the elderly Orlando Duruin in
Sitio Daligan, Barangay San Juan in the early morning of July 20, 2015. The
three were tied with a rope and paraded before barangay residents before
disappearing for three days and presented to the media after they were charged
with illegal possession of firearms and explosives and rebellion.
Harassment, intimidation and threats to the lives of
farmer-leaders, among them Steward Garon of Barangay Masi, Eling Azucena of
Barangay Bural, Rafael Guimay of Barangay Masi and MFA, Felipe Bisiotan of
Barangay San Juan, Ambona Batolan of Barangay Masi and TDMA, as well as
Aris Infante, Raul Ladino, Lina Ladino and Edward Callueng of Barangay Lipatan
and LFO.
Filing of trumped-charges like three counts of kidnapping
with homicide against civilians Boy Garon, Jun-Jun Bayaua, Rexon Batulan,
Rafael Guimay, Mario Gregorio, Elyong Balisi, Isot Simangan, Rowena Battad,
Celso Manglallan, Titing Baloran, Eling Asucena and Rogel Asucena.
Violations of Aggay human rights like the illegal search and
ransacking of five houses while the farmers were sleeping, threatening
civilians with high-powered firearms as they were being interrogated, accusing
everyone with membership in the NPA, theft of air guns used by residents for
hunting game, pots, lighters and household items, and destroying crops,
throwing away palay, monggo and corn after they forced the people to scamper
away by firing their guns.
Abuse of the rights of women and children, with the wife of
Mendo Bisiotan being kicked by soldiers after she came to help her husband who
was being tortured and forced to admit that he was an NPA member and the son of
Marlon Baganay being held by the collar and thrown out of a military vehicle as
he tried to join his father, whom the troopers brought to a camp.
Establishment of camps by the 17th IB in barangay
halls, health centers and private houses in Barangay Masi, San Juan and Bural.
Deployment of members of the Peace and Development Teams in
the centers of Barangays Masi, Bural and San Juan to act as psywar
(psychological warfare) units in the villages, with troops watching all the
residents whom they also barred from congregating, with menfolk being subjected
to intense surveillance.
Protection of Boog Bisiotan, known to the residents as a
“criminal on the loose” who also poses as a “rebel-returnee” accused of raping
and killing his own aunt, Toyang Bisiotan Cepedan, and acting as a spy and
guide for the military in Zinundungan
Valley .
Intensified military operations have spread terror, threats
and peril to the people of the valley.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/118028/not-just-the-lumad--rights-groups-say-cagayan-valley-ips-also-suffering-from-military-abuses
'JUST LIKE NANCY' | Lumad slam CHR for veering away from rights violations during inquiry
From InterAksyon (Sep 25): 'JUST LIKE NANCY' | Lumad slam CHR for veering away from rights violations during inquiry
Religious testify at the inquiry in Davao City conducted by the Commission on Human Rights into atrocities against lumad. (photo by Kilab Multimedia)
Leaders of hundreds of Manobo sheltering in a church compound inDavao
City after fleeing the
militarization of their communities blasted the Commission on Human Rights for
allegedly veering away from the abuses that drove them to evacuate.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/117992/just-like-nancy--lumad-slam-chr-for-veering-away-from-rights-violations-during-inquiry
Religious testify at the inquiry in Davao City conducted by the Commission on Human Rights into atrocities against lumad. (photo by Kilab Multimedia)
Leaders of hundreds of Manobo sheltering in a church compound in
The Manobo datu also accused Commissioners Roberto Eugenio
Cadiz and Leah Tanodra-Armamento, who presided over the Thursday hearing that
opened the CHR’s inquiry into atrocities against indigenous people in Mindanao,
of refusing to allow the Pasakkaday Salugpongan Kalimuddan or PASAKA,
a federation of lumad organizations in southern Mindanao ,
to participate in the inquiry.
Datus Mentroso Malibato, who is also spokesman of Karadyawan,
an organization of Manobo from Kapalong, Davao del Norte, and Kaylo Bontolan of
Talaingod town in the same province and PASAKA spokesman, told InterAksyon.com
in an interview that, instead of looking into the human rights violations, such
as the occupation by the military and paramilitary groups of their communities
and tribal schools, that drove them to flee their homes, Cadiz and Armamento
“focused their questions on the conditions inside (the Haran Mission House of
the United Church of Christ in the Philippines) and if we would be willing to
transfer if they and the (Department of Social Welfare and Development) could
find us another sanctuary.”
While acknowledging the difficulties at Haran , Malibato and Bontolan said they
preferred to stay at the church compound, which has provided them sanctuary
from the incessant militarization of their communities since the 1990s,
“because we feel safe here.”
Besides, he added, “simply transferring us is not the
solution to our problem and will only expose us to harassment, or worse, by the
military and the Alamara” militia.
And when the lumad pressed their demand that the
military withdraw from their villages and disband the Alamara and other
militias, the two datu and PASAKA chairman Kerlan Fanagel said Cadiz and
Armamento responded by asking if they would also demand the pullout of the New
People’s Army.
“Why pass the burden for counterinsurgency to the lumad
and make us responsible for driving away the NPA? Why force us, civilians, to
take part in their campaign?” Fanagel asked.
“Dismayado kami (We are dismayed),” Malibato said.
“Dili nila kayang tubagon ang among panawagan (They could not respond
to our call).”
Malibto and Bontolan described the attitude of the CHR
officials as “no different” than that of North Cotabato Representative Nancy
Catamco, the chair of the committee on indigenous people at the House of
Representatives who, together with the military, has claimed the Haran refugees
are not evacuees but victims of “trafficking” who have been “manipulated” by
groups they accuse of supporting the communist rebel movement. It is a claim
discredited even by United Nations special rapporteur on the human rights of
indigenous people Chaloka Beyani but which they continue to cling to.
During a controversial visit to Haran in July, Catamco was caught on video
berating the refugees and insisting they should return to their communities
even as she insisted the military and militias should not pull out of their
villages.
Catamco is also widely seen as having instigated a violent
attempt later that month to evict the Haran
lumad and force them to return home.
Since then, the congresswoman has also suggested the passage
of a measure that would, in effect, legitimize the tribal militias the military
has organized as part of its counterinsurgency program and who have been blamed
for the worst human rights abuses against lumad communities.
This includes the September 1 murders of Emerito Samarca,
executive director of the Alternative Learning Center for Agricultural and
Livelihood Development, and Manobo leaders Dionel Campos and Datu Bello Sinzo,
by the Magahat militia in Lianga town, Surigao del Sur, which
triggered a mass exodus of some 3,000 lumad who remain at the sports
center in the provincial capital Tandag City.
Following the Lianga killings, the military, which in the
past has acknowledged using the militias as “force multipliers” against the New
People’s Army, have taken to denying anything to do with the paramilitary
bands. But Surigao del Sur Governor Johnny Pimentel has dismissed their denials
even as he has demanded that the Army “disarm, disband or kill” the militias he
says have been responsible for atrocities that have seen the lumad in his
province trapped in a cycle of evacuations for the past six years.
The datu also questioned what they called Cadiz and Armamento’s refusal to recognize
PASAKA and allow it to participate in the proceedings.
“We are not a support group. We represent the lumad as
the federation of tribal organizations in southern Mindanao ,”
Fanagel stressed.
“Not recognizing us shows they are insensitive to the
collective nature of lumad community life” and worse, “is consistent
with the (military’s) claims that we are among those who supposedly ‘manipulte’
the lumad,” he added.
On Friday, the Haran refugees
staged a picket in front of the Apo View Hotel in Davao , where the inquiry is being held, and
where the CHR will be hearing testimony from the military and other government
agencies.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/117992/just-like-nancy--lumad-slam-chr-for-veering-away-from-rights-violations-during-inquiry
Leave us now
From the Mindanao Times (Sep 25): Leave us now
Datus want deal for military pullout of IP villages
LUMAD leaders demanded a signed manifesto, to be witnessed by Mayor Rodrigo Duterte himself, for the military to pull out of their communities and to disband the paramilitary group Alamara.
http://mindanaotimes.net/leave-us-now/
Datus want deal for military pullout of IP villages
LUMAD leaders demanded a signed manifesto, to be witnessed by Mayor Rodrigo Duterte himself, for the military to pull out of their communities and to disband the paramilitary group Alamara.
The Lumad leaders also stressed that the Armed Forces of the
Philippines
should also be a signatory to the manifesto to make sure that it is binding.
The Commission on Human Rights, led by commissioners Leah
Tanodra-Armamento and Roberto Eugenio Cadiz, is holding a two-day public
inquiry ending today, over the alleged hamletting of indigenous communities in
Talaingod, Bukidnon and Surigao.
The inquiry was ordered by CHR chairman Jose Luis Martin
Gascon on Sept. 14, to understand the causes of the recent incidents and shed
light on the real situation of the lumads in their communities.
Yesterday, Lumad leaders reiterated their accusation of the
military allowing paramilitary forces like the Alamara to run rampant in the
communities in support to the government’s counter-insurgency campaign.
They claimed that the Alamara was behind the series of
killings in their area, as the military looked the other way.
Aside from militarization, the inquiry also tackled the
“rescue” operation in Haran
on July 23 which injured 12 people, including two police officers.
Rev. Sarly Templado of UCCP, who was present during the
operation, told CHR execs yesterday that as early as 6 a.m. on July 23 their
compound was already surrounded by the police.
He said that he met with representatives of the National
Commission on Indigenous Peoples and Department of Social Welfare and
Development and agreed on the services for the lumads, giving time for the
lumad leaders to conduct a brief consultation among themselves, as well.
However, with no warning, at 10 a.m. the police stormed the
fence of the compound.
When Pastor Templado asked Supt. Marvin Pepino, the ground
commander of the operation, who gave them the order to open the gate, the
police officer could not give the exact answer.
Among those holed up at the Haran compound was the 14-year-old girl who
was allegedly raped by three soldiers in different occasions. The Philippine
Army chief revealed that court martial proceedings are ongoing to verify the
involvement of the three accused, whose names were not revealed to the media.
Today, the CHR will invite Sr. Supt. Vicente D. Danao,
Congresswoman Nancy Catamco, vice mayor Paolo Duterte and military officials to
the inquiry.
Previously, Capt. Alberto Caber, chief of the Eastern
Mindanao Command’s Public Information Office (PIO), said the accusations of
military abuses are not true.
He called this was just “black propaganda” initiated by
leftists that hype human rights violations as their “way of life.”
“There is no problem with the entry of the Army to the
communities. The problem is when these are infiltrated by the New People’s Army
(NPA),” he said.
The presence of the rebel forces in the communities, Caber
claimed, hamper government services from reaching the indigenous people.
He said that before the army enters lumad communities, they
hold consultations and get the approval of the local government units (LGUs),
including the mayors.
Sheena Duazo, secretary general of Bayan Southern Mindanao
Region, said that the military’s denial of the human violations is a move to
evade from the issue.
“The militant support groups are in the forefront of
exposing human rights violations perpetrated by the military and its
paramilitary groups, that is why the AFP is trying to silence and discredit
militants in order to confuse and deceive the public. It is a desperate attempt
to hide the truth,” she added.
http://mindanaotimes.net/leave-us-now/
Philippines struggles to find abducted foreigners
From the Mindanao Examiner (Sep 26): Philippines struggles to find abducted foreigners
Barely a week after gunmen stormed an upscale resort in southernPhilippines , security forces are
still struggling to search for 3 foreigners and a Filipino woman abducted
there.
Trinidad said the military
is getting a barrage of intelligence and all these information are still being
verified. “There are so many intelligence reports saying the hostages are in
Sulu, Davao Oriental and all these are raw information unless verified and
confirmed, but nothing so far,” he said.
http://mindanaoexaminer.com/philippines-struggles-to-find-abducted-foreigners/
Barely a week after gunmen stormed an upscale resort in southern
Police and military said at least 11 armed men stormed the
Holiday Oceanview Resort on Samal Island off Davao del Norte province on
September 21 and seized Canadians John Ridsdel, 68; and Robert Hall, 60; and
the 56-year old Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad, the resort’s manager, including
Filipina Teresita Flor. They escaped on two motorized outrigger boats.
No individual or group claimed responsibility for the daring
abductions, but authorities were suspecting the rebel group Abu Sayyaf –
notorious for kidnapping of foreigners and raid at tourist resorts in southern Philippines and Sabah
– was behind the attack, although communist and other rebel groups also operate
in the region.
Canada has already warned its citizens from travelling to
some parts of the southern Philippines due to the serious threat of terrorist
attacks and kidnapping and these included Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Lanao del
Sur and Maguindanao provinces in the Muslim autonomous region, as well as to
the Zamboanga Peninsula and the provinces of Sarangani, Lanao del Norte, Davao
del Norte, Davao del Sur, Davao Occidental, Davao Oriental, Cotabato, South
Cotabato, and Sultan Kudarat.
But since then, the fate of the hostages remains unknown –
not even their whereabouts – although Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte and
General Aurelio Baladad were quick to say that the victims had been taken to
Sulu, a province about 287 nautical miles from Samal
Island east of Mindanao
region.
Baladad also tagged the Abu Sayyaf as behind it. And Duterte
has offered himself to the abductors in exchange for the safe release of all
the hostages.
Captain Roy Trinidad, a spokesman for the military’s
anti-terror task force, said there is no confirmation the hostages were taken
to Sulu, one of five provinces under the Muslim autonomous region. “We have no
confirmation about these reports, but we continue to search for the abductors
and their victims. The operation is going on and we have alerted our forces to
be on the lookout,” he told the Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper.
Police authorities also said there were no indications the
hostages were taken to Sulu.
Sulu’s Area Coordinating Council also said it has no
information whether the victims had been transferred to the province. The
Sulu Area Coordination Council – organized during the time of then Sulu
Governor Sakur Tan – is where various agencies converge to address issues,
resolve conflicts and find the best solution to current problems besetting the
province. The province has a total of 20 Area Coordinating Centers – one for
each of Sulu’s 19 towns and the central headquarters in Patikul town.
Just last year, police authorities in the province set up a
special anti-kidnapping task rorce to address the threats of kidnappings and
abductions there.
Governor Totoh Tan has previously said that many kidnapped
victims were taken from other provinces and cities only to bring and hide them
in Sulu, dragging the province to a situation that gives a bad impression to
the local peace and order situation.
But while local government officials and multi-sectoral
sectors work hand in hand to address the rising criminality and the threats
posed by the Abu Sayyaf, other groups with political agenda have resorted in
spreading false reports of kidnappings and killings and other black propaganda
in social media, including Facebook, to further scare the public and destroy
the reputation of different leaders in Sulu.
Locals have condemned and others protested the spate of
kidnappings in Sulu and some also launched online campaign in social media to
denounce the kidnappings in the province.
The Holiday Oceanview resort has not issued any statement
and its website – www.holidayoceanview.com – was hacked and its page redirected
to a Japanese sex site.
Police and military have tightened security on Samal Island ,
a favorite destination of foreigners and Filipino holidaymakers in southern Philippines
because of its pristine beaches and diving and snorkelling sites.
http://mindanaoexaminer.com/philippines-struggles-to-find-abducted-foreigners/
Former rebels in Eastern Samar get financial aid from gov’t
From the Philippine News Agency (Sep 26): Former rebels in Eastern Samar get financial aid from gov’t
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=808436
BORONGAN CITY, Eastern Samar – The government has
distributed Php 715,000 worth of checks to 11 former members of the New
People’s Army (NPA) who abandoned rebellion.
Each rebel returnee got Php 65,000, broken down to
livelihood assistance (Php 50,000) and immediate financial aid (Php 15,000).
Governor Conrado Nicart, chairman of the provincial peace
and order council led the turnover on Thursday at the provincial capitol.
Key officials from the Department of the Interior and Local
Government (DILG), Philippine Army, Philippine National Police and Department
of Social Welfare and Development joined Nicart.
“I commend these former rebels for their decision to return
to the government’s fold. I hope for your success as you return to normal
lives,” Nicart said.
The cash grant was from the Office of the Presidential
Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) under the government’s Comprehensive Local
Integration Program (CLIP).
The former rebels were from towns of Maslog, Dolores, Oras,
San Julian, Giporlos, Hernani, and Borongan
City .
The proposed livelihood projects for former rebels include
hog fattening, hog raising, piggery, community store, rice retailing, and small
scale trading.
The DILG has certified that recipients are former rebels by
visiting their homes and talking to their friends, relatives and neighbors.
The government agency also examined their proposed projects,
type of assistance required and make sure that the amount received by formers
rebels are full.
Roel (not his real name), 47, a former rebel, who used to be
a courier of the rebel movement, said the assistance from the government is a
big help in their “new life back to the society.”
“We were assessed if we are qualified and were trained by
the DSWD on how to deal with our new life and develop entrepreneurial skills,”
he added.
A native of this city, Jojo, 30 became a member of communist
group when he was 17. His wife, Lea from nearby Can-avid town was also a rebel
for eight years when they decided to surrender this year.
Asked why they surrendered, the couple said they want their
three children to have a better future. They couldn’t imagine their children
living in mountains and hiding.
“My children need to have documents like birth certificate
so they could study in a regular school. They don’t have that. If we continue
living and becoming member of communist group how can we ensure the future of
our children and their safety?” he asked.
Jojo’s cash assistance will be used for his proposed rice
retailing business while Lea’s grant will be her start-up capital for small
community store.
Governor Nicart reminded all rebel returnees to use the
grant wisely.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=808436
With BBL or no BBL, MILF assures it remains committed to peace
From the Philippine News Agency (Sep 26): With BBL or no BBL, MILF assures it remains committed to peace
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=808372
The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) on Saturday assured
the people of Mindanao and the entire Filipino
people that it will not resort to violence if the draft Bangsamoro Basic Law
(BBL) does not hurdle Congress or within the term of President Aquino.
"We have foreseen this event, we will remain committed
to peace, our people have been tired of war," Mohaqher Iqbal, MILF chief
negotiator, said in a statement after Congress set another deadline for the
passage of the draft law.
Instead of Sept. 15, Congress set Dec. 16 as the day when
the BBL is passed after series of deliberation.
Iqbal stressed that the MILF is not entertaining, even
imagining, returning to the battle fields anew if the draft law is not acted
upon.
Certainly, only the commitment of President Aquino keeps the
ember of hope still alive," Iqbal said, adding that "so far the MILF
has not been informed by anyone in the government peace panel that the BBL is
dead."
The MILF chief negotiator said his panel has considered all
these scenarios after the signing of the Comprehensive Agreement on the
Bangsamoro (CAB).
He added it is better to wait for the next administration
than accept a half-baked, diluted version of the BBL.
"We remain optimistic the original version will survive
political and democratic processes," he said even as he announced the
MILF, with the backing of the Aquino administration and the international
community, will continue another struggle, this time it is called
"democratic struggle."
Recently, Iqbal told a forum of Catholic Bishops Conference
of the Philippines-Episcopal Commission on Inter-religious Dialogue, National
Ulama Conference of the Philippines ,
Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches, Religions for Peace Philippines and Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation
at Ramon Magsaysay
Center , Manila , that the MILF remained and will
continue to commit itself to the peace process.
The BBL, which was crafted on the basis of the letter and
spirit of the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro (FAB) and the Comprehensive
Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB), was submitted to Congress a year ago.
If approve, it will be the basis for the establishment of a
new political entity, replacing the current Autonomous Region in Muslim
Mindanao (ARMM).
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=808372
Muslim families flee homes for fear of clan war following death of 2 farmers
From the Philippine News Agency (Sep 26): Muslim families flee homes for fear of clan war following death of 2 farmers
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=808319
About 400 families have fled their homes in a remote village
here following the death of two villagers whose families vowed to retaliate.
Chief Insp. Joseph Placer, Alamada police chief, said
residents, mostly from Maguindanaon tribe, fled their homes toward the town
center and refused to return home unless peacekeepers are stationed in the
village.
Placer said unidentified men ambushed and killed Anwar
Sumlay and Taib Tuandato, both farmers and resident of Sitio Marabuay, Barangay
Bao, Alamada, North Cotabato .
Placer said tension ran high when relatives of the victims
publicly declared they will retaliate since they know who did the crime.
The local police have initiated a dialogue in an effort to
prevent the eruption of a clan war.
Relatives of Sumlay and Tuandato vowed to retaliate to
attain justice after the 14th day of prayer for the dead is over.
Both were killed in an ambush on Sept. 17 while heading for
home on board a motorbike.
Placer said he already requested the 45th Infantry Battalion
to deploy Army peacekeepers to help the local police maintain law and order in
the barangay where the Moro Islamic Liberation Front maintains a community.
The victims’ families who were identified with the MILF
vowed to avenge their death.
Local Muslim religious leaders, however, vowed to use its
influence to settle the incident peacefully through payment of “blood money” by
the suspects’ families.
”We are negotiating with the parties involved, a peaceful
settlement is in progress, I hope we will succeed,” Ustadz Ameril Kudindang, a
local Islamic preacher said in a phone interview.
He said the parties involved were actually related by blood
and by affinity.
Placer said the local police was closely coordinating with
the Muslim elders to prevent a full-blown shooting war involving warring
families.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=808319
BRP Lake Caliraya air cooler up for repairs
From the Philippine News Agency (Sep 26): BRP Lake Caliraya air cooler up for repairs
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=808473
The Philippine Navy (PN) has allocated the sum of
Php2,500,000 for the repairs of the air cooler of BRP Lake Caliraya (AF-81),
one of its oilers.
The Navy is slated to bid out the contract for the repair of
air cooler next month. Winning bidders must be able to complete the repairs
within 30 calendar days.
Bids received in excess of the contract shall be
automatically rejected.
The BRP Lake Caliraya is a single product replenishment
platform that has a depot-to-ship, ship-to-depot, and a ship-to-ship refueling
capabilities.
She was commissioned into PN service last May 23.
The BRP Lake Caliraya was one of the three largest vessels
of Philippine National Oil Corporation (PNOC) Fleet. She was built in Zhejiang
Zhongxing Shipyard in Taizhou Peoples Republic
of China
in November 2007.
The sailing crew commissioned by the PNOC brought the ship
from Taizhou , China
to Manila in
January 2008.
The ship was used by the PNOC in transporting mainly bunker
fuel to the different ports of the Philippines .
On May 11, 2014, the ship was brought from its anchorage
area in Bataan to Keppel Shipyard, Bauan,
Batangas to undergo dry docking and other related repairs.
She was then brought to Naval Shipyard, NSPL, Cavite City
to undergo structural, habitability, machinery, and piping repairs.
AF-81 was named after Lake
Caliraya , a beautiful lake located in
the province of Laguna . As the lake provides a source of
livelihood sustenance for the people of Caliraya, AF-81 on the other hand, will
help sustain naval operations.
With her modern replenishment and refueling gear, she will
be central to facilitating and sustaining the operations of the fleet in the
operational areas.
AF-81 is commanded by Lt. Cmdr. Mamerto A Goleta and manned
by selected officers and men of Sealift Amphibious Force.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=808473
Militiaman hurt in Davao City clash
From the Philippine News Agency (Sep 26): Militiaman hurt in Davao City clash
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=808496
A militiaman was wounded during an encounter with New
People's Army (NPA) forces in Barangay Manuel Guinga, Davao City
Friday morning.
10th Infantry Division public affairs office chief 1st Lt.
Alexandre Cabales said the incident took place 9 a.m.
He added that the 40-minute firefight between troopers of
the 84th Infantry Battalion and NPA fighters stemmed from reports of concerned
civilians who expressed fear of the armed men lurking in their communities.
In the encounter, a militiaman was wounded in the legs while
the NPAs were forced to abandon their positions, leaving behind their personal
belongings and two improvised explosive devices and several magazines.
Cabales also believed that several NPAs were wounded in the
encounter as evidenced by several blood trails.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=808496