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Rights defender detained while doing humanitarian work

Karapatan Rizal Secretary General Gloria Rodriguez was arrested and detained while doing humanitarian work, May 7. (Contributed photo)

Karapatan Rizal was quick to point out that the incident was only the latest in a series of “harassment and delaying tactics” performed by the 80th IB designed to “deny the family of their latest victim justice and hide their crimes.”

By JUSTIN UMALI

SANTA ROSA, Laguna – Human rights watchdog Karapatan Rizal reported that their secretary general, Gloria Rodriguez and three other companions were temporarily detained on “violations” of the enhanced community quarantine in Antipolo, Rizal, May 7.

The group stated that Rodriguez, or Nanay Oya to her colleagues, 65, and her team were investigating reports related to a March 28 encounter between the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the New People’s Army. The encounter left two dead, with one missing.
Karapatan Rizal responded to requests from family members of the missing individual, whose remains they suspect were taken by the military and eventually found on April 3, in Tanay, almost 80 kilometers away from the site of the encounter in barangay Puray, Rodriguez, Rizal.

Rodriguez and her team worked to recover the bodies for autopsy. They were arranging documents and had just come from the Philippine National Police Crime Laboratory in Taytay when they were stopped at a checkpoint in barangay San Jose, Antipolo by soldiers of the 80th Infantry Battalion, Philippine Army.

Although her group had quarantine passes signed by barangay officials, they were arrested on May 7 on alleged ECQ violations and detained at the Antipolo Municipal Police Station around 7:30 p.m.

No charges were filed and the group was released that same evening, 9 p.m.

Karapatan Rizal was quick to point out that the incident was only the latest in a series of “harassment and delaying tactics” performed by the 80th IB designed to “deny the family of their latest victim justice and hide their crimes.”

As of this writing, Rodriguez and her team are still trying to secure the remains of the deceased.

The group noted that the military has been “characteristically uncooperative” to their requests, instead opting to “pass [them] around from agency to agency in hopes of frustrating the fact-finding mission.”

Karapatan Rizal also reported cases of harassment done against the family and relatives of the dead, as well as the imposition of “unnecessary qualifications” to dispute the family’s claim.

“These are the tell-tale signs that the military is trying to cover up their tracks,” Karapatan Rizal said. “It’s almost sickening how the AFP can just play with the tragedies of their victims like it was a game.”

The March 28 encounter occurred well within the period of simultaneous unilateral ceasefire between the AFP and NPA. Both sides claim that the other broke their own ceasefires by launching an attack in barangay Puray.

In a statement, the 80th IB claimed that they were conducting “community work” when they were ambushed by “about 30 NPA fighters”, resulting in a firefight.

The National Democratic Front of the Philippines, however, disputed this. The NDFP said “sources within the military” stated that a team led by a Staff Sargeant Angot was conducting a patrol when they ambushed NPA members conducting a medical mission in the area.

“This is another addition to the 80th IB’s laundry list of human rights violations and crimes against the people of Rizal,” said Karapatan Rizal in a statement. “They are exploiting the pandemic and ECQ to spread fake news and black propaganda against the people’s clamor for mass testing and social amelioration.”

They condemned the 80th IB and called on them to “provide medical services and relief,” instead of “sticking to the fascism and harassment that they know.”

The post Rights defender detained while doing humanitarian work appeared first on Bulatlat.

‘Bayan Ko’ Community Singing

Bilang pakikiisa sa naganap na ‘No to ABS-CBN Shutdown’ online protest kahapon, Mayo 8, nag-alay ng isang awitin ang mga progresibo mula sa iba’t ibang sektor.

The post ‘Bayan Ko’ Community Singing appeared first on Kodao Productions.

uSAP-usapan

Ni RICHARD R. GAPPI 

Sanay na kami.
Ang tawaging kilikili ng lungsod
at libag ng lansangang umaalingasaw.
Amoy-kanal?
Sa estero kami naka-bahay.

Mga tamad. Hindi nagbabayad ng tax. Pero unang nakinabang sa SAP.

O e ano?
Hindi natutong mag-ipon?

Nang bumili kami ng 3-in-1, kape’t sabon, nagbayad ng kuryente at ilaw
wala ba dung value-added tax?

Yung butas na tubo ng tubig, kanino kinukuha ang bayad? Wala ba kaming surcharge sa bill ng tubig at ilaw?

Nang sumabit kami sa jeep na punuan, para makahabol nang oras sa construction site, wala bang excise tax ang langis
na tiningi ng drayber sa Petron o Caltex?

Yung dalawa kong anak,
bumili ng juice para magkalasa
ang tinapay na baon na kasingtabang ng papel, wala bang sin tax dun?

Oo, nagyoyosi ako, umiinom
ng gin panghagod sa maghapong pagod
wala bang sin tax dun?

Isuma natin ang sumatotal:

Sa sweldo kong paextra-extra
at kontrakwal, may natira ba
Para pang-ipon man lang kung magkasakit mag-iina ko?
Kahit wag na ko.

Nang matapos at ilunsad ng palakpakan ang gusaling nagkaporma sa lakas ko’t kamay, naimbitan ba man lang kami?
Nabigyan ba kami ng bonus?
Kung maningil kami, magkano kaya ang lakas-paggawa naming nawala o hindi binayaran dahil wala sa minimum ang sweldong tinanggap?

Tamad?
Sinong nagtayo ng mga gusaling may sash na PROJECT OF GOVERNOR, MAYOR, CONGRESSMAN MULA SA PORK BARREL na ang 20% e pinabank-transfer ng amo ko sa akin sa account ng mga kagalang-galang nating opisyal,
hindi pa natutuyo ang tinta ng bolpen pagkapirma sa kontrata?

Annual tax?
Sino ba gumawa ng batas ba exempted ang suweldo P30,000 pababa?
Kung P350 daily minimum wage sa Calabarzon, i-times natin sa 20 araw kung walang no work no pay, kasalanan bang ang suweldo mamin e exempted sa tax?

O e ano kung una at prayoriti kami sa SAP?
Oo, ngayong panahon ng COVID, magkaiba ang tunog at kalam ng aming sikmura at tiyan na matagal nang pinagkaitan ng sistemang supertubo habang tinatapunan kami ng mumo.

Ngapala, may nakatabi ko sa pay out, de-semento ang bahay at may sariling lupa. Malapít sa gusi, matibay ang kinakapitan.

Sinong ayaw ang umahon? Bigyan n’yo kami ng pagkakataon.
Kaming gulugod at muhon,
taga-tindig ng sibilisasyon.
Kahapon. Ngayon.
At sa dako pa roon.

(https://www.bulatlat.com)

The post uSAP-usapan appeared first on Bulatlat.

Before Covid-19, Philippine Jails Already a Death Trap

Human rights advocates believe that numbers will still increase and the full force of Covid-19 is yet to be felt. They also call for transparency in releasing death and infection rates to help craft policies and mitigate the spread of false information.

The post Before Covid-19, Philippine Jails Already a Death Trap appeared first on Kodao Productions.

Pagpapasara sa ABS-CBN, tinutulan ng mga mag-aaral at guro ng UP

Ayon sa mga nagprotesta, hindi ang media kundi si President Rodrigo Duterte ang dapat na patigilin sa pag-atake sa malayang pamamahayag at malayang ekspresyon.

The post Pagpapasara sa ABS-CBN, tinutulan ng mga mag-aaral at guro ng UP appeared first on Kodao Productions.

Teresita Naul, advocate for the poorest, remains detained in Agusan jail

At 62, frail with asthma and a heart condition, Teresita Naul seems a rather unlikely candidate for charges of kidnapping, serious illegal detention, and destructive arson. This did not prevent joint elements of the Philippine Army (AFP) and national police from arresting her on precisely such accusations on 15 March 2020, in Lanao del Sur, […]

The post Teresita Naul, advocate for the poorest, remains detained in Agusan jail appeared first on Manila Today.

Marco Polo Davao announces cease operation by June 15

The Marco Polo Davao announced Friday that it will cease operations starting June 15 due to the economic impact brought about by Covid-19 to their industry.

Offline protests condemn shutdown of ABS-CBN

Former Dean of UP College of Mass Communication Roland Tolentino joins the protest action against the shutdown of ABS-CBN, May 8. (Photo by Obet de Castro)

“Shrinking democratic space through the militarizing of the pandemic response as well as not closing the largest media network’s airwaves is a direct affront to civil liberties.”

By EMILY VITAL
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — Several groups staged offline protest actions to express their condemnation to the shutting down of media giant ABS-CBN, May 8.

Observing physical distancing, members of progressive groups under the banner of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan held a short program in front of the University of the Philippines – College of Mass Communication. Former UP-CMC Dean Rolando Tolentino joined the symbolic action.

At early evening, Carillon bells rang in support of press freedom and in solidarity with the ABS-CBN employees.

This is the third time under the present administration that the Carillon was played. The first was in 2017 when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Duterte’s order allowing the burial of the late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani (Heroes Cemetery). In 2018, the Carillon played patriotic songs “Bayan Ko” and “Pilipinas kong Mahal” to condemn the SC decision to oust former Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno.

Church people, meanwhile, rang bells and lit candles in solidarity with the workers of ABS-CBN.

“Closing ABS-CBN, at this time, is a move in the wrong direction,” Rev. Irma Balaba of the Promotion of Church People’s Response (PCPR) said in a statement.

Members of Promotion of Church People’s Response stage a protest inside a Church compound, May 8. (Contributed photo)

“Shrinking democratic space through the militarizing of the pandemic response as well as not closing the largest media network’s airwaves is a direct affront to civil liberties,” added Rev. Marisol Villalon of PCPR.

The National Council of Churches in the Philippines (NCCP) said the National Telecommunications Commission’s cease and desist order against ABS-CBN is “reminiscent of the dark times of martial law.”

“There is reason to be afraid at a time when we need more members of the media to monitor if our poor sisters and brothers are really being provided with social and economic relief. There is a reason to be angry when there are less cameras and reporters covering human rights violations by state forces,” the NCCP, the national aggrupation of mainline Protestant Churches in the Philippines, said.

ABS-CBN was forced to go off the air, May 5, after the NTC issued a cease and desist order. The network’s franchise expired on May 4.

President Rodrigo Duterte publicly threatened not to renew the giant network’s franchise. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

The post Offline protests condemn shutdown of ABS-CBN appeared first on Bulatlat.