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Leody’s team shot at in Bukidnon

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Mayen Jaymalin – The Philippine Star, April 20, 2022

MANILA, Philippines — Five people were wounded when the team of Partido ng Lakas ng Masa (PLM) presidential candidate Leody de Guzman was attacked by armed men in Quezon, Bukidnon yesterday.

De Guzman was in Quezon town to support leaders and members of the Manobo-Pulangiyon, who were allegedly displaced from their ancestral land by a politician.

A report from the Northern Mindanao police said the shooting happened in Barangay San Jose at around 12:20 p.m.

At a virtual conference, De Guzman said they were holding a peaceful rally when security guards hired by Mayor Pablo Lorenzo fired upon them without any provocation.

A video of the incident uploaded on Facebook showed De Guzman giving a comment at the disputed property moments before the shooting happened.

“This land was seized by a politician, and we do not understand why the government cannot implement the law that they granted the land to the Manobo despite them having all the documents saying the land is theirs,” he said in Filipino.

De Guzman was with PLM senatorial candidates Roy Cabonegro and David D’Angelo at the venue.

After a few minutes, gunshots rang out, and De Guzman and other participants scampered for safety. Cabonegro and D’Angelo were not hurt in the attack.

One of the wounded was farmer’s group organizer Nanie Abela, who was beside De Guzman during the attack. Police identified another wounded person, 42-year-old Charita del Socorro.

The names of three other wounded members are not yet known.

De Guzman said the victims’ wounds were not fatal, but needed medical attention. He vowed to support the wounded in filing a case against those behind the shooting. The labor leader urged President Duterte to take immediate action and for other presidential candidates to stand up against attacks directed toward indigenous people.

“These incidents happen with the collusion between the LGU (local government unit) and other agencies of the government that should be taking care of the rights of indigenous peoples,” De Guzman said in Filipino.

He noted that military men were present at the incident, but did not take any action to stop the shooting. He said they were fired at by security guards for about 15 minutes.

PLM vice presidential candidate Walden Bello and senatorial candidate Sonny Matula condemned the shooting incident.

“This kind of violence should not be tolerated,” Bello said, as he expressed relief that his running mate and other senatorial candidates were unhurt.

Cabonegro said the shooting incident was not an isolated case because “landgrabbers” are now attacking indigenous people who want to reclaim their ancestral home.

Police probers said the group of tribal members “forcibly” entered the premises of the Kiantig Pineapple Co. before the shooting happened.

“We know that we are dealing with the rich and powerful in this fight. However, it’s different when we are directly subjected to violence. Our lives are worthless to them,” De Guzman said.

Lt. Col. Michelle Olaivar, spokesperson for the Northern Mindanao police, said De Guzman’s camp did not coordinate with the local police for area security.

Comelec condemns shooting

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) condemned the incident, as it vowed to use the full force of the law to hold the persons behind the incident accountable.

“This is a cowardly act that should be condemned by peace-loving Filipinos,” Comelec Commissioner George Garcia told reporters in a Viber message yesterday. “If this is an election-related incident, count the Comelec in to use all our powers to get to the bottom of this and hold accountable the culprits and face the full force of the law.”

A similar gunshot firing incident reportedly happened in Malabang, Lanao del Sur, allegedly between two political families running in the May 9 national and local elections. The Comelec said that it is still gathering information on the incident.

The Comelec said that Tubaran and Malabang towns in Lanao del Sur are already placed under Comelec control pursuant to a March 25 resolution of the Committee on the Ban on Firearms and Security Concerns (CBFSC) which was previously led by Commissioner Socorro Inting. 
   The Comelec said Inting was on work related to overseas voting when the resolution was passed by the CBFSC and Commissioner Aimee Ferolino was acting chair.

In a statement, Comelec Chairman Saidamen Pangarungan said that he condemns the use of violence related to the May 9 national and local elections as he vowed to conduct an investigation on the shooting incidents in Bukidnon and Lanao. – Emmanuel Tupas, Helen Flores, Robertzon Ramirez

Maria Ressa sues red-tagging Badoy, adds to various calls for Ombudsman sanction

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Apr 19, 2022, Lian Buan

The Nobel laureate argues that Lorraine Badoy’s malicious posts ‘endanger my safety and welfare’ and violate the Code of Conduct for public officials

Maria Ressa sues red-tagging Badoy, adds to various calls for Ombudsman sanction

MANILA, Philippines – Rappler CEO and Nobel laureate Maria Ressa filed on Tuesday, April 19, an administrative complaint against communications undersecretary Lorraine Badoy over “malicious and defamatory” posts and articles against the journalist, adding to mounting calls for the Office of the Ombudsman to sanction the official.

In a complaint filed Tuesday with the Ombudsman through her lawyer, Ressa listed at least nine instances when Badoy published content – either on her verified Facebook page or through official websites – that branded the journalist as an “enemy of the state.” In one post, Badoy upped her red-tagging by falsely declaring that Rappler is an “ally and mouthpiece” of the communist party and its military arm, the New People’s Army.

Red-tagging is the act of linking someone to the armed communist rebels, which is not strictly criminalized by existing laws. There is also no law criminalizing membership in the communist party also, but red-tagging is feared to be a weapon for legal warfare, particularly under the anti-terror law, and worse, that it may be used as justification for executions.

The complaint described as “malicious and defamatory” Badoy’s posts that called Ressa a “sociopath” and “rotten soul,” among others. Badoy also referred to the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize as “Nobel Piss Prize.” The Rappler CEO made history last year as the Philippines’ first Nobel laureate.

These attacks “transgress boundaries of professional decorum and protocol” and “have also emboldened others to join in their vicious attacks against me,” Ressa said. 

Ressa asserted that Badoy’s disparaging claims against her are “highly improper” considering that the official “is expected to observe ‘the highest degree of excellence, professionalism, intelligence and skill’ as required by Section 4(A) of the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards.”

“Badoy’s accusation endangers my safety and welfare which falls below the required standards expected of public officers like Respondent Badoy under Section 4(A) of R.A. No. 6713,” Ressa added.

“Clearly, the acts of Respondent Badoy which constitute conduct prejudicial to the best interests of the government, insubordination, and misconduct are sufficiently proven. The acts are documented not only in the 28 October 2021 and 29 October 2021 Facebook posts published in her respective verified account, but also the official websites of the Philippine News Agency and NTF-ELCAC [National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict],” she said in her complaint.

Calls for Ombudsman action

The punishment for administrative charges is suspension and/or dismissal. The Office of the Ombudsman also has the power to preventively suspend an official facing a complaint to preserve evidence and make sure witnesses within the office are not unduly influenced.

Ressa’s complaint adds to mounting calls for the Ombudsman to sanction Badoy, who serves concurrent functions as undersecretary of the Presidential Communications Operations Office, and a spokesperson of the government’s counter-insurgency task force.

Dozens of groups earlier filed similar complaints against Badoy before the Office of the Ombudsman in three separate occasions from March to April. The earlier complaints were for criminal actions, accusing Badoy of also violating the anti-graft law, the Data Privacy Act, and the International Humanitarian Law which prohibits persecution of a specific group of people.

Before this, there have also been a slew of criminal complaints against Badoy and retired general Antonio Parlade, who continues to red-tag activists and journalists through his Facebook page.

Because there is no law criminalizing red-tagging per se, victims of red-tagging have resorted to creative ways to launch a legal offensive against officials of the Duterte government, including Badoy.

Lower threshold to sanction Badoy

Ressa’s complaint points out that “the quantum of evidence required in administrative proceedings is only substantial evidence,” which it defined as “reasonable evidence which a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to justify a conclusion.”

It makes the argument that sanctioning Badoy in this case does not need guilt beyond reasonable doubt.

“It is respectfully prayed that after due proceedings, the Honorable Office issue Formal Charges against Respondent Badoy for Conduct Prejudicial to the Best Interests of the Government, Insubordination, and Misconduct, and such other charges as may be deemed appropriate by the Honorable Office,” said the complaint.

The Department of Justice under Secretary Menardo Guevarra, which sits as member of the NTF-ELCAC, has been trying to distance itself from the red-tagging spree of the Duterte government, disowning a human rights report that red-tagged human rights groups, and sidestepping questions about the task force.

Guevarra has also publicly backed the enactment of a law against red-tagging. – Rappler.com

Rights fighters pass the Bar, stand firm on justice amid rising attacks

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By: Kurt Dela Peña – Content Researcher Writer/INQUIRER.net /April 14, 2022

MANILA, Philippines—“Have courage and serve the people”.

Anya Remonte and Rea Guiloreza, law graduates of the University of the Philippines and Central Philippine University, said this as they looked back on one of the reasons they took the Bar examinations—“the Philippines needs lawyers”.

The Supreme Court (SC) released results of the 2020/2021 Bar examinations on Tuesday (April 12) and two of the 8,241 law graduates who passed the “Biggest Bar Ever” were Remonte and Guiloreza.

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan

Remonte, who was also recognized by the SC for having a grade 85 to 90 percent, said she drew strength from brave people’s lawyers who were killed because of the work they do.

“As I read the growing list of names, I promised that we were going to continue what they started and fight back,” Remonte, who graduated last year, told INQUIRER.net.

Guiloreza, who lives in Iloilo, said she drew strength from Chad Booc, who was arrested last year and then killed, the Tumandok tribesmen who were shot dead by police, and lawyer AK Guillen who was stabbed last year.

READ: Lawyer for red-tagged tribal folk stabbed; laptop, documents taken

She told INQUIRER.net that the assaults—arrest of Booc, killing of the Tumandoks, and the attack on Guillen—were personal to her and these led her to take the exams in one go because “we are really needed.”

This was the reason that even with escalating attacks on lawyers, the two said they will never be silenced. Like what Remonte stressed, “let us not forget that the Lawyer’s Oath is not an empty sacrament”.

Attacks on lawyers

The National Union of People’s Lawyers (NUPL) said last year that from 1984 to 2021, 129 lawyers had been killed and most of the killings remained unsolved.

READ: Duterte admin has seen more lawyers killed than previous presidents – NUPL

  • 1984 to 1986 (Ferdinand Marcos): 4
  • 1986 to 1992 (Corazon Aquino): 4
  • 1992 to 1998 (Fidel Ramos): 0
  • 1998 to 2001 (Joseph Estrada): 1
  • 2001 to 2010 (Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo): 45
  • 2010 to 2016 (Benigno Aquino III): 21
  • 2016 to 2021 (Rodrigo Duterte): 54

NUPL said that from 2011, there have been 176 work-related attacks on lawyers, including 73 killings—these were linked to the handling of human rights cases (5); drug cases (20), and other types of cases (56).


It said the highest was documented in 2019, with 39 prima facie profession or work-related attacks. A steady increase in the attacks has been observed since 2016. In 2018, 16 lawyers were killed.

The 54 killings since 2016, the NUPL said, were 74 percent of the work-related killings in the last decade and 42 percent since 1984. Out of the 73 killings “perpetrators” were identified in 21 cases, but there was only one conviction.

“Since he began his term, there have been an average of 11 killings per year or almost one per month. Most of these killings appear to be unresolved to date,” NUPL said, referring to President Rodrigo Duterte.

Lawyer Edre Olalia, president of NUPL, said that since 2016, three people’s lawyers had been killed—Benjamin Ramos of Negros Occidental, Rex Fernandez of Cebu City, and Juan Macabbad of South Cotabato.

READ: CHR laments killing of Cebu lawyer

He said two lawyers survived kill attempts—Guillen and a lawyer on Panay Island. “Some are charged with fabricated crimes while many are likewise red-tagged,” Olalia said.

READ: Lawyer killed in South Cotabato gun attack

Need for people’s lawyers

NUPL consists of 250 lawyers and 250 law students, but with escalating attacks on activists, Olalia said the need for people’s lawyers, or those who handle cases of abuse of human rights for free, has become more urgent.

He told INQUIRER.net that many of the cases of 700 political prisoners in the Philippines are handled by lawyers of NUPL. This, as NUPL lawyers also handle “socio-economic” cases.

Through the years, NUPL has handled high-profile cases of rights abuses, like the ones filed against retired general Jovito Palparan, who was convicted in 2018 for the disappearance of activists Karen Empeno and Sherlyn Cadapan.

NUPL is likewise the legal counsel for overseas Filipino worker Mary Jane Veloso who is on the death row in Indonesia after she was arrested in 2010 for bringing in two kilos of heroin.

Veloso had said she had no knowledge of the illegal drugs she was carrying, insisting that the bag with the drugs had been given to her by recruiters who had already been sentenced to life in 2020.

READ: It’s final: Mary Jane Veloso can testify vs her recruiters

NUPL likewise handled the case filed against the Bakwit 7, or individuals arrested on Feb. 15, 2021 at the University of San Carlos-Talamban campus for allegedly training lumad to become child rebels.

The Society of the Divine Word and the University of San Carlos had denied the accusation, saying the lumad children were in Cebu for education in a school for “bakwit,” or evacuees who fled counterinsurgency military operations in their communities.

‘You will never bring us down’

Remonte and Guiloreza, who were already with NUPL since college, said they were witness to how lawyers and activists are being harassed, but won’t back down.

NUPL said that since 2011, there had been 104 cases of attacks on lawyers—almost half of these, 50, were by vilification or red-tagging. These were the rest of the cases:

  • Threats, harassment, intimidation: 36
  • Surveillance: 19
  • Attempted killing, physical injury; strafing: 13
  • False charges: 12
  • Arbitrary Detention: 3
  • Abduction/Disappeared: 1

NUPL said 49 cases involved rights lawyers/public interest lawyers and that 30 were attributable to state agents–-14 of whom belonged to the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict, a multi-agency body created by Duterte and given billions of pesos in funding.

Guiloreza said she herself had experienced harassment for the work she does: “I was red-tagged by a Facebook page because of my photo with Rep. Sarah Elago (Kabataan) and my work with NUPL.”

She also narrated how she and her companions were tailed by men on motorcycles when they were driving back home from paralegal work on Panay Island for the Tumandok tribesmen.

Remonte told INQUIRER.net, “We will never be silenced. As long as there is one lawyer who is willing to stand up and fight for truth and justice, you will never bring us down.”

“Let us stand for justice. Let us be brave and let us forge onto this journey of a thousand struggles. Whatever happens from this day forward, let us serve the people,” she said.

“Wherever I go from here, I know that I will be a lawyer who will uphold her oath and bring pride to the privilege of being in the legal profession,” said Remonte, who said that her experience of helping out in NUPL cases helped her prepare for the Bar exams.

‘Help us end all the lawfare’

As NUPL welcomed the 8,241 new lawyers, Olalia said, “Together, let us undo a lot of things that are wrong with our society, many of which are ironically enabled by some of our fellow lawyers.”


The 2020/2021 Bar exams had the second highest passing rate, 72.2 percent, since 8,241 of the 11,402 law graduates have passed. The highest was in 1954, 75.17 percent.

Out of those who passed, 70 were from NUPL while 14 law graduates were recognized for excellent performance (having a grade of more than 90 percent).

READ: LIST: Examinees with excellent, exemplary performance in 2020/21 Bar exam

Out of 8,241 who passed, 761 were recognized for exemplary performance, which indicates having a grade of 85 to 90 percent. Olalia said more than 10 are from NUPL.

RELATED STORY: SC, various groups join forces to address killings of lawyers

Mom of food pantry advocate sues Lorraine Badoy

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By: Dempsey Reyes – Reporter / Philippine Daily Inquirer /April 14, 2022

MANILA, Philippines — The mother of Ana Patricia “Patreng” Non, who put up the Maginhawa community pantry, has filed a complaint against Lorraine Badoy, the controversial spokesperson of the government’s anticommunist task force, for red-tagging her daughter and committing “mental and psychological” torture.

Zena Bernardo, Non’s mother, filed in the Office of the Ombudsman on Wednesday an 18-page complaint — the sixth against Badoy — seeking her suspension from office and asking Ombudsman Samuel Martires to conduct disciplinary proceedings to determine her administrative, civil, and criminal liabilities.

Bernardo, accompanied by lawyer Antonio La Viña, cited posts made and shared by Badoy and the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac) in April 2021, the month that Non launched the community pantry on Maginhawa Street in Quezon City.

Non’s idea not only helped people reeling from the economic effects of lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic but also inspired thousands nationwide to replicate her efforts.

‘Weapons of communists’

The April 19 post on the “Peace Philippines” Facebook page alleged that community pantries were “weapons of communists to recruit members” without providing basis.

The post was shared by NTF-Elcac’s Facebook page and eight other Facebook pages and profiles which, according to Bernardo’s complaint, “like Peace Philippines, either have links to the Philippine National Police, or publish posts, comments and memes similar to the NTF-Elcac’s, or both.”

Bernardo likewise cited a press statement made by Badoy that the latter also posted in her Facebook page on April 20, calling the community pantry a “modus operandi” of communist groups.

Part of her post went: “Once in a while, stop using the good hearts of Filipinos to deceive and put them in danger.”

At that time, Badoy’s red-tagging of community pantries was criticized and denounced by civic groups, senators and congressmen, local officials like Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte and even Vice President Leni Robredo.

No basis

According to Bernardo, Badoy also said in an interview over SMNI News Channel that Non had “links” to the communist movement.

“The claims of Badoy-Partosa with regard to Patreng, the Maginhawa Community Pantry, and the community pantry movement in general, have no basis in fact and reality,” Bernardo said in her complaint, referring to the NTF-Elcac spokesperson by her married name. “Nowhere in her statement or in her interview did she give any evidence to support her claims, which indicates that she does not have any.”

She added that Badoy, for her red-tagging of Non and the community pantry organizers, committed “mental and psychological torture and persecution” under Republic Act No. 9851 or the Philippine Act on Crimes Against International Humanitarian Law, Genocide and other Crimes Against Humanity.

Badoy was also charged with committing malicious disclosure of sensitive personal information under the Data Privacy Act, as well as violating the antigraft act, and the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees.

“This is long overdue,” Bernardo told reporters following the filing of the complaint. “[Badoy’s] acts are really enraging since we have an official in the government using her position to do this.”


The desaparecidos of Duterte’s drug war

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Apr 15, 2022, Aie Balagtas See, Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism

The desaparecidos of Duterte’s drug war

Victims – whether they were drug suspects or mere passersby – are abducted and kept in a holding area to be killed later for staged ‘one-time-big-time’ drug operations

MANILA, Philippines – Marina Cerbito gasped for air as she talked about her son Reymond, 27, who was abducted in April 2018 and never found again. In between clenching fists and wiping tears that streamed down her cheeks, the 60-year-old mother mouthed barely understandable words to express desperation and a sense of uncertainty.

The ordeal lasted for 10 minutes, and her daughter Marife, who sat beside her in the family living room, was afraid that the asthmatic Marina would pass out. But Marina held on to tell the story of her son, Reymond.

Reymond was a police asset, she said. He “disappeared like a bubble” in the second year of President Rodrigo Duterte’s brutal campaign against illegal drugs.

Reymond was last seen on April 27, 2018. He left their house in Sta. Maria, Bulacan, at 5 pm that day to buy a bottle of soda. Four years later, Marina was still waiting for him to come home.

The fortune tellers that Marina Cerbito spoke to insisted that her son was alive and well. But Reymond’s friend Alberto Dimaala (not his real name) knew that he was dead. Dimaala said he was responsible for getting Reymond killed.

Dimaala said he was part of the group that abducted Reymond on orders of the local police intelligence unit. The same cops instructed him to strangle his bosom buddy with a vehicle fan belt. He recalled Reymond struggling to breathe and calling him a “traitor” before a cop shot his friend dead.

Dimaala said the cops later sold the corpse for P10,000 to a funeral parlor in need of a show body for a gambling scheme called sakla.

Marina had heard Dimaala’s story before. Several times, in fact. Once, during a drinking session, she said a guest who wasn’t Dimaala admitted to the crime.

Ayaw po maniwala ni Mama doon sa kinukwento,” said Marife. (My mother didn’t believe those stories.)

Dimaala’s story was supported by Dahlia Romero (not her real name), also part of the group that allegedly performed tasks for the police. She was interviewed separately and with Dimaala for this report.

Romero said Reymond Cerbito had been a headache – “sakit ng ulo” – to the police and local government unit because of his theft cases. He was also known for creating a commotion each time he was drunk.

time-big-time’ drug operations Photos byRaffy Lerma https://39b86c4e30c813b4230dd03b06ea0bfc.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

MANILA, Philippines – Marina Cerbito gasped for air as she talked about her son Reymond, 27, who was abducted in April 2018 and never found again. In between clenching fists and wiping tears that streamed down her cheeks, the 60-year-old mother mouthed barely understandable words to express desperation and a sense of uncertainty.

The ordeal lasted for 10 minutes, and her daughter Marife, who sat beside her in the family living room, was afraid that the asthmatic Marina would pass out. But Marina held on to tell the story of her son, Reymond.

Reymond was a police asset, she said. He “disappeared like a bubble” in the second year of President Rodrigo Duterte’s brutal campaign against illegal drugs.

ANGUISH OF A MOTHER. Marina Cerbito is still waiting for her son, 27-year-old Reymond, to go home. He went missing on April 27, 2018. Photo by Raffy Lerma

Reymond was last seen on April 27, 2018. He left their house in Sta. Maria, Bulacan, at 5 pm that day to buy a bottle of soda. Four years later, Marina was still waiting for him to come home.

The fortune tellers that Marina Cerbito spoke to insisted that her son was alive and well. But Reymond’s friend Alberto Dimaala (not his real name) knew that he was dead. Dimaala said he was responsible for getting Reymond killed.

Dimaala said he was part of the group that abducted Reymond on orders of the local police intelligence unit. The same cops instructed him to strangle his bosom buddy with a vehicle fan belt. He recalled Reymond struggling to breathe and calling him a “traitor” before a cop shot his friend dead.

Dimaala said the cops later sold the corpse for P10,000 to a funeral parlor in need of a show body for a gambling scheme called sakla.

Marina had heard Dimaala’s story before. Several times, in fact. Once, during a drinking session, she said a guest who wasn’t Dimaala admitted to the crime.

Ayaw po maniwala ni Mama doon sa kinukwento,” said Marife. (My mother didn’t believe those stories.)

Dimaala’s story was supported by Dahlia Romero (not her real name), also part of the group that allegedly performed tasks for the police. She was interviewed separately and with Dimaala for this report.

Romero said Reymond Cerbito had been a headache – “sakit ng ulo” – to the police and local government unit because of his theft cases. He was also known for creating a commotion each time he was drunk.

Kaya winala parang bula,” Romero said. (That’s why they made him disappear like a bubble.)

The two former police agents, Dimaala and Romero, have since gone into hiding, afraid the cops would go after them next. Haunted by guilt, they agreed to talk about the role they had played in the government’s “drug war.” 

Their credibility as sources was based on the extent of their knowledge and the consistency of the details they provided about police operations known to journalists who followed the violent anti-drug campaign.

They both requested anonymity, fearing for their lives.

‘12 will be killed’

Other victims Dimaala and Romero helped disappear included friends Allen Rey Napoles and Erlino Pable, who were found dead on May 30, 2018, in a province north of Manila.

The police said they were thieves who resisted arrest – a narrative that was repeated in news reports filed by a media pack that had embedded themselves in police operations.

However, a few hours before the cops called the reporters to see the bodies, as had been their practice after they conducted operations, an odd text sent to at least two journalists by a source privy to the communication of cops in the area cast doubts on what had happened.

“12 papatayin sa Bulacan (12 will be killed in Bulacan),” the source said in the message. It didn’t escape the journalists’ eyes that the message was written in the future tense. 

At that time, the police operation was ongoing. 

Was it a simple typographical error? The suspicious message was forgotten, with nary a mention in the news reports. However, a review of the incident based on the former police agents’ information showed that Napoles and Pable had been missing for two days before their bodies were presented by the police.

Dimaano said the two friends were biking home when he grabbed them from the road. He said he usually kidnapped illegal drug users, but he had been waiting for hours and had yet to see one. The two boys came from an area where illegal drug users lived and where drugs were often sold; Dimaano thought that was a good enough excuse.

Mag ‘One Time, Big Time’ noon, kailangan namin may ma-present,” Dimaano said, referring to a province-wide police operation where they needed to show results. Romero said there appeared to be a “contest” among police operatives then for who would produce dead bodies first.

Napoles and Pable were supposedly blindfolded and then taken to a makeshift police holding area known as “compac.” Romero and Dimaano said the place was known to cops and their assets as a “freezer” or “stockan ng mga taong papatayin para sa One Time, Big Time (a storage area for people to be killed for One Time, Big Time).”

At the “freezer,” Romero remembered Napoles saying: “‘Ate, makakalaya ba kami dito? Kasi hinahanap na ako ng magulang ko. Hindi pa nila alam na nandito ako.’ ’Yun ang sabi ng batang ’yon,” Romero said. (“Are you going to free us? Because my parents are looking for me. They don’t know I’m here.” That’s what that kid said.)

Romero said she did not know what to say, so she lied and acted clueless the way she always did when cops told her to watch over those they had abducted. 

Balak ko no’ng time na ’yan iwanan sila ng cellphone kasi naawa ako. Ang problema lang, natakot ako kasi siyempre baka kami naman ang pagbalingan. Noong time na ‘yon, wala kami talagang pupuntahan,” Romero said. (I was planning at that time to give them a cellphone because I pitied them. The problem was, I was scared because the police might turn against us. At that time, we had nowhere to go.)

Before the boys were killed, Dimaano gave them food, prompting Napoles to ask: “Kuya, baka pinakakain mo kami ng masasarap, ikaw din naman ang pumatay sa amin?” (You’re feeding us good food, but you might be the one killing us later?)

Mylyn Napoles, who had been waiting for her son Allen Rey to come home, saw the news report on the morning of May 30. It said her son was killed in an “encounter” with policemen in a nearby town, which was notorious for “nanlaban” cases. Nanlaban, which means someone who fought back or resisted, had been the term used by police operatives to describe drug suspects killed during raids.

Mylyn remembered all the details of the humid Monday afternoon, on May 28, when she last saw her son. Allen Rey had just arrived home from work when Pable invited him to his birthday party. Mylyn gave him the green light, but reminded her son to come home before the skies turned pitch black.

They knew the streets were not safe. Bodies had been turning up dead since the government’s drug war started. 

What happened to Napoles and Pable was reminiscent of the case of six passersby who were abducted by policemen in the nearby city of San Jose del Monte, Bulacan, and later killed in what was called a “fabricated” drug war operation. Eleven cops from the intelligence unit faced multiple criminal cases, including kidnapping and illegal detention.

Enforced disappearances

Filipinos are not new to enforced disappearances. Reymond’s death and Marina’s anguish echo the agony of families who lost their loved ones during the Martial Law of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, said Nilda Sevilla, co-chairperson of Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearance (FIND) when she was interviewed in 2021. 

Sevilla’s own brother was abducted and disappeared without a trace. The families left behind rarely found closure, she said. They oscillated between hope that their loved ones were still alive and fear that they’re really gone. It’s mental torture that punishes families whenever they remembered the missing.

“The pain and anguish come from uncertainty,” Sevilla said. “The human imagination is boundless.”

Human rights group Amnesty International recorded at least 77 cases of disappearances during Marcos’ Martial Law. Under the Duterte administration, FIND recorded 24 cases related to Duterte’s war on drugs out of a total of 50 cases of disappearances the group had verified. The group was still investigating 19 other cases, but there were many more families that did not know how to seek help.

Sevilla said a lot of the cases of missing individuals under the Duterte administration could be considered enforced disappearances, which meant that the state or its agents were involved in the abduction, arrest, and concealment of the victim’s body or whereabouts.

Sevilla was alarmed the country had entered a “new dimension” when it came to enforced disappearances. It appeared that the victims were persecuted not for their political ideology but for their socioeconomic class, she said.

Most of the missing were poor and many had been accused of either selling or using illegal drugs.

The disappearances were usually reported in the media as crime stories. But testimonies from witnesses and the families pointed to a disturbing pattern in which many of the victims were forcibly taken from their homes, or abducted on the streets by either policemen or a group of armed men equipped with high-powered guns and getaway vehicles.

Amnesty International said disappearing people is a tool of oppression “frequently used as a strategy to spread terror within society.” It is commonly employed by autocratic administrations, such as Duterte’s, because the “insecurity and fear it generates is not limited to the close relatives of the disappeared, but also affects communities and society as a whole.”

The reasons for disappearances varied, Sevilla said. Some saw it as the administration’s way of instilling fear. For some, it was a way for the perpetrators to evade persecution.

What’s clear from the pattern of disappearances under Duterte’s regime, said Carlos Conde of the New York-based Human Rights Watch, was that the perpetrators were organized and well-greased.

“These disappearances of people suspected of drug use or who are targets of the drug war…it indicates that…this is much more systematic than it looks,” Conde said.

“It tells you that this is a very, very organized and very, very systematic way of conducting the drug war,” Conde said. “It takes resources. It takes money, at least two people, sometimes we see in videos that three or four people are doing the kidnapping. So it’s a much more coordinated action. It suggests to you that this is the government, these are state agents doing it.”

Many documented cases

Documentation of cases of involuntary disappearances was “very difficult,” said FIND researcher Sonny Resuena, because relatives of drug war victims were hesitant to speak over fears of retribution from the state.

The government also has no uniform procedure for government agencies to investigate an enforced disappearance, said Resuena. Relatives searching for their loved ones were made to go back and forth between government offices, until they got tired of searching.

He said the cops who used to help them in their advocacy also turned hostile against human rights defenders.

In June 2016, the Philippine National Police issued Memorandum Circular 2016-033, providing guidelines on the recording, monitoring, and investigation of missing and found persons. It requires the local police unit where the case was reported to include the name of the missing individual on the list of missing persons, and on the PNP database.

It also requires PNP custodial facilities or centers to issue “a certification in writing to the inquiring person on the presence or absence and/or information on the whereabouts of such disappeared person” in case of an inquiry from the missing person’s family member, or a member of a human rights organization, or the media.

However, families of missing victims of the drug war interviewed for this report said none of the cops they approached for help mentioned or followed the guidelines.

Guillermo Eleazar, a former national police chief who is now running for senator, said a thorough investigation is required before someone is confirmed to be a victim of enforced disappearance. He said the government had investigated reports on missing people but he refused to provide details, saying the official statistics “might be misconstrued unless properly explained.”

“The cops will investigate, but if there is no lead or if they are facing a blank wall, how can they proceed?” Eleazar said, dismissively.

“Some of the reported missing ran away from their homes,” he added, saying it was up to the families to update the cops if their “missing” relatives came home.

Forensic pathologist Racquel Fortun said the justice system had been rendered useless under the Duterte administration. To begin with, the Philippines never had strong institutions that would help families identify their missing loved ones and seek justice for them, she said. 

The Commission of Human Rights (CHR), an independent constitutional body, also has no office dedicated to this task.

As a result, the missing remain invisible and eventually forgotten. No one is looking for them, except for family members, who, because of minimal resources, eventually give up.

Endless search

The situation has forced families to devise their own ways to look for their loved ones, often incurring costs that they could not afford to cover.

Families usually went to five places in their search for answers. They started at police stations or barangay (village) halls to check if their loved ones were detained. Cops were not always helpful during these searches. Once, Marina blew her top, exchanging cuss words with a duty officer who made fun of Reymond’s whereabouts.

Families proceeded to funeral parlors if the search went nowhere. This was where they began to entertain the possibility of worst-case scenarios.

In their endless search, they also found themselves inside churches. Even the non-religious sat on the pews to seek answers from a higher being. Others turned to fortune tellers.

The search was made more challenging by the stigma attached to drug war victims, which wasn’t the case for the desaparecidos of the Marcos years. Sevilla said they had been discriminated against even by families of other disappeared activists.

Sevilla said it took her two years to convince other members of her group to embrace the families of drug war victims. “The anguish and pain are all the same…. They also do not have tombs where they could mourn,” she said.

Marife Cebito said her mother, Marina, would never accept that her son was dead unless she found his body.

In 2021, three years after her son’s death, Marina asked the police station in Sta. Maria town for a copy of the flash alarm filed after her son went missing. She was given the document, but not after the cops grilled her as to why she needed the document.

Madami nga daw pong tanong sabi ni Mama,” Marife said. (They had so many questions, according to Mama.)

They also returned to the fortune tellers and continued to distribute posters with Reymond’s photo, hoping that someone had seen him alive.

On some days, Marina would still wait by the camachile tree where Reymond liked to find shade, imagining her son running to her arms. – with additional reporting from Ciriaco Santiago III and Vincent Go, Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism/Rappler.com

This investigative collaboration project was supported by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime’s Resilience Fund Fellowship. The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism provided additional editorial guidance. 

This piece is republished with permission from the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.

Journalists condemn harassment of reporter at campaign coverage

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Philstar.com, April 15, 2022

MANILA, Philippines (Updated 6:22 p.m.) — Campaign staff of former Sen. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. shoved aside a journalist attempting to interview the presidential candidate after a rally in Quezon City last Wednesday, during which she was also red-tagged by an anonymous Twitter user.

Marcos’ security staff blocked reporter Lian Buan from getting close to the presidential candidate. Then, one of his media relations officers, identified by the news outlet as Krizza Mendizabal, shoved the journalist’s wrist and kept putting down her smartphone, which she was using to shoot video.

Buan was then pushed by security personnel onto the scaffolding, which made her exclaim, “Aray! Ang sakit!”

On the sidelines of the same campaign sortie, Marcos granted an interview with SMNI for a special called “On the Road with the Frontrunner.” SMNI is a self-styled news network owned by fugitive preacher Apollo Quiboloy who has endorsed Marcos and his running mate, Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio.

As she was covering the Marcos sortie, Buan was also red-tagged by an anonymous Twitter user claiming to be a K-Pop fan. User @shiningtwicexo baselessly accused her of being “one of the high-ranking officials” of underground communist organs.

Buan is one of the directors of the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines, which the Twitter user also called without basis a legal front of armed communist rebels.

‘Journalists pose no threat’

In separate statements, Buan’s news outlet Rappler, the NUJP and the Movement Against Disinformation condemned the online and offline harassment of her.

“[Journalists] pose no security threat — unless the campaign team considers questions from independent media as security threats. This kind of media censorship, which involves physical force, is unacceptable in a country that protects free speech and a free press in its Constitution,” Rappler said.

The MAD said it is important that journalists can freely ask hard questions to candidates, especially those seeking the top elective post in the country.

“Shoving a journalist aside for doing what her job demands of her makes a mockery of this democracy and puts into question the modicum of respect we afford to those whose jobs involve fact-seeking and truth-telling,” it said.

Meanwhile, the NUJP warned that the red-tagging of Buan has “implications on her safety, especially while covering the election campaign.”

“We have repeatedly said that there is no ideological test for membership in NUJP and we have members from across the political spectrum,” it said. “Asserting press freedom and advocating for media workers’ welfare are ideals that are part of the democracy that we say we are living in.”

Rappler appealed to the Marcos camp and its supporters “to be more transparent, to stop harassing journalists, and to respect the media’s role in a free society.”

Reporters covering the Marcos campaign have had a hard time gaining access to the presidential candidate who has largely been reclusive to mainstream media but has engaged with friendlier social media-based outlets and influencers.

In the rare incidents that reporters do get access to Marcos, he gave statements that drew flak, like saying that the Philippines should stay neutral on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and that there is no need to prioritize the rehabilitation of war-torn Marawi City.

Explaining Marcos’ dodging independent media and debates, his campaign said that they prefer communicating their messages “directly” to the people. — Xave Gregorio

Death toll from Philippines landslides, floods hits 115

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Cecil Morella – Agence France-PresseApril 14, 2022 | 2:18pm

ABUYOG, Philippines — The death toll from landslides and flooding in the Philippines triggered by tropical storm Megi hit 115 on Thursday, official figures showed, as more bodies were found in mud-caked villages.

Scores of people are still missing and feared dead after the strongest storm to strike the archipelago nation this year dumped heavy rain over several days, forcing tens of thousands into evacuation centres.

In the central province of Leyte — the worst affected by Megi — devastating landslides smashed farming and fishing communities, wiping out houses and transforming the landscape.

The disaster-prone region is regularly ravaged by storms — including a direct hit from Super Typhoon Haiyan in 2013 — with scientists warning they are becoming more powerful as the world gets warmer because of human-driven climate change.

Emergency personnel in Abuyog municipality have retrieved dozens of bodies from a coastal village destroyed by a landslide on Tuesday.

At least 26 people were killed and around 150 are missing, authorities said, with little hope of finding anyone else alive.

Many of those who died had hiked up the mountain to avoid flash floods, villagers told AFP. 

“It sounded like a helicopter,” said Pilar councillor Anacleta Canuto, 44, describing the noise made by the landslide.

Canuto and her husband and their two children survived, but they lost at least nine relatives.

Pilar fisherman Santiago Dahonog, 38, said he rushed into the sea with two siblings and a nephew as the landslide hurtled towards them.

“We got out of the house, ran to the water and started swimming,” he told AFP. “I was the only survivor.” 

Another 86 people were killed and dozens injured in vegetable, rice and coconut-growing villages around Baybay City last weekend, local authorities said. At least 117 are still missing.

The hardest hit was Kantagnos where 32 people died and 103 have not been found. 

In the nearby village of Bunga, 17 people perished when a wave of sodden soil swept down a hill and slammed into the riverside community. Only a few rooftops are visible in the mud.

Three people also drowned on the main southern island of Mindanao, the national disaster agency said in its latest update.

Another three deaths previously reported in the central province of Negros Oriental were dropped from the tally after they were found to be unrelated to the storm. 

Megi came four months after a super typhoon devastated swathes of the country, killing more than 400 and leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.

The Philippines — ranked among the most vulnerable nations to the impacts of climate change — is hit by an average of 20 storms every year.

‘Impunity remained’: US report shows drug-related killings continue in Philippines

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Patricia Lourdes Viray – Philstar.com, April 13, 2022

MANILA, Philippines — Unlawful killings linked to the Duterte administration’s campaign against illegal drugs continue, according to a report from the United States Department of State.

The US state department’s 2021 Country Report on Human Rights Practices listed significant human rights issues in the Philippines, including unlawful or arbitrary killings, reports of forced disappearance, torture by and on behalf of the government and non-state actors, among others.

Unlawful or politically motivated killings

The report pointed out that there were numerous reports of killings of activists, judicial officials, local government leaders, and journalists by government allies, antigovernment insurgents, and unknown assailants over the past year.

“The reported number of extrajudicial killings varied widely, as the government and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) used different definitions,” the US state department reported.

Government data from January to August 2021 showed that:

  • Law enforcement authorities conducted about 20,000 drug operations.
     
  • The government’s RealNumbersPH platform reported 180 suspects killed and 34,507 arrested during drug operations.
     
  • The Commission on Human Rights said it had investigated 100 new complaints of alleged extrajudicial and politically motivated killings.
     
  • The commission investigated 130 victims allegedly perpetrated by 39 police personnel, eight military personnel, five insurgents, three local government officials and 45 unidentified persons.
     
  • The CHR also investigated 49 drug-related killings with 53 victims with suspected police or Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency involvement.

The US report also mentioned the “Bloody Sunday” raids in Laguna, Rizal and Batangas, where nine human rights activists were killed and six arrested in police operations.

“Local and international human rights organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch described widespread impunity for killings. There were no prosecutions or convictions for extrajudicial killings in the year to October and three since the start of the drug war in 2016,” the report said.

President Rodrigo Duterte’s so-called narco-list was also mentioned in the report. In June 2021, former Talitay, Maguindanao mayor Montasser Sabal, who was on Duterte’s list, was killed after reportedly grabbing the firearm of a police escort while being transferred to Camp Crame following his arrest.

Disappearance, torture

The US state department noted that while the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ Center for Law of Armed Conflict did not report any case of forced disappearance linked to the military from January to July 2021, the CHR reported eight victims of abduction and forced disappearance from January to August.

“Armed forces members perpetrated two of these cases; communist insurgents, another two; national police members, one; alleged members of the National Bureau of Investigation, one; and those responsible for the remaining cases were unidentified,” the report read.

The reported highlighted the case of farmers’ group organizer Elena Tijamo, who was found in Manila in September 2021. She was abducted in her home in Bantayan Island, Cebu in June 2020.

After her abduction, Tijamo told her family that her kidnappers would release her after the COVID-19 lockdowns ended.

According to the report, the CHR had received reports of security forces and police accused of routinely abusing and sometimes torturing suspects and detainees.

“As of August, the CHR had investigated 21 cases of alleged torture involving 25 victims; it suspected police involvement in 17 of the cases,” it said.

There were also reports of rape and sexual abuse of women in police custody, such as the rape of two women detained at the Cebu City police station. Eleven police officers were accused of robbery, extortion and rape during this incident.

The US state department noted that impunity was a significant problem in the security forces, particularly the Philippine National Police.

“Human rights groups continued to express concern about abuses committed by the national police and other security forces and noted little progress in reforms aimed at improving investigations and prosecutions of suspected human rights violations,” the report said.