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On ouster plots and upholding the people’s right to oust tyrannical regimes

Artwork by Dee Ayroso / Bulatlat

If there exists an actual, substantive, and strong basis for the people to call for Duterte’s resignation, ouster, or removal from office by whatever means, the people have the right to exercise their sovereign will to do so.

By GERIFEL CERILLO*
Bulatlat.com

In light of the alleged ouster plot recently revealed by Dr. Dante Ang of the Manila Times and purportedly sourced from the Office of the President, discussions on Duterte’s ouster has been in the news. The Duterte administration is intent on identifying the alleged movers behind this so-called plot, but is likewise insidiously trying to delegitimize calls to resist an already repressive and increasingly intolerable government by demonizing any legitimate expression of dissent.

News on this alleged conspiracy theory comes at a period where criticisms are being raised due to violations to our sovereignty in the West Philippine Sea (WPS), pork insertions in the 2019 budget, questionable spike in the Duterte family’s wealth, the ineffective yet bloody war on drugs, the seemingly relentless assault on people’s rights and fundamental freedoms, among other anti-people policies. These are legitimate and substantive issues deliberately ignored by the Duterte administration by choosing to play the victim, while altogether viciously attacking its critics.

This is not the first instance when the Duterte government attempted to peddle an alleged ouster plot. The Red October conspiracy was foisted by the Duterte’s men during the latter part of 2018 in a purported attempt to douse the growing united broad opposition to his misrule. However, the recycling of such tactics can be seen as an acknowledgement of the crisis situation that Duterte and cohorts have created in the Philippines.

The convoluted matrices and witch hunt rhetoric can indeed impact on civil liberties of individuals and groups mentioned. However, the more important issue needs to be asked – so what if people are clamoring for the ouster of Duterte? If there exists an actual, substantive, and strong basis for the people to call for Duterte’s resignation, ouster, or removal from office by whatever means, the people have the right to exercise their sovereign will to do so.

Even the 1987 Philippine Constitution provides an accountability clause that allows for the impeachment of the President for, and conviction of, culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust. Clamor for accountability or calls to oust current officials thus stand on legitimate grounds.

Issues of civil resistance, the right to rebel and the right to resist have been proscribed, even criminalized by many governments. However, this is an integral component in the exercise of people’s rights by which the people can seek accountability from repressive governments. The use of democratic processes to install an undemocratic governance tantamount to dictatorships is not unheard of in global politics. Many remedies to this, including the particular provisions on the people’s exercise of their right to self-determination in certain national constitutions and international agreements, function as a last alternative to tyrannical regimes. The overthrow of governments, when they cease to uphold their function and mandate, and when the general public sees no other recourse to their redress as governments act contrary to the interest of citizens, is justified. All around the world, much of our modern constitutions are anchored on, and are largely influenced by the revolutions waged against despots and oppressors.

The right to resist is enshrined in various international agreements, whether explicitly or indirectly, and supplemented by various succeeding papers and conferences tackling the issue of civil resistance, rebellion, and resistance. Core human rights agreements such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, among others, stipulate the no State has a right to engage in any activity or to perform in any act aimed at the destruction of the rights and freedoms that are enshrined in these agreements. This includes the right to due process, the right to self-determination, freedom of expression, peaceable assembly, and association, among others. What, then, when your government has systematically violated these fundamental human rights and killed thousands, actively prevents any investigation, filters documents that are available, and attacks those who seek any semblance of accountability?

Generally, to resist against repressive regimes is a declaration of the centrality of justice, and a refusal to let injustice reign. It is, thus, an open challenge to an unjust system. Definitively, experts convened during the 1981 Conference of the United Nations Educational, Social and Cultural Organization asserted “the notion of a right to resist violation of human rights is inseparable from human rights.” Thus, acknowledgment of human rights also inherently translates to acknowledgment of the means people can exercise to defend and protect said rights.

Unfortunately, despite the existence of legally binding agreements such as the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), governments have continued with their criminal conduct and have initiated acts of reprisals against those who expose human rights violations. International law recognizes such situations and have set up mechanisms for redress. In the event of the failure of these processes, political theorists, such as in the case of John Locke, a breach of the social contract makes revolution a duty, a necessity to frustrate tyranny. This is mirrored in many constitutions and have led to an international recognition that there exists an individual and collective right of resistance against governments who are found to be violating human rights.

The United Nations Educational, Social, and Cultural Organization Experts’ Conference in 1981 also strengthens this by adding:

The means of resistance must be proportionate to the gravity of the human rights which are being violated; and the violent resistance may only be relied upon as a last resort in extreme situations after all nonviolent means of resistance have been exhausted.

International agreements and conferences have recognized this entire spectrum of response against repression and oppression. Acts of reprisal such as those perpetrated by the Duterte regime has been a common response. We reiterate that lawyers, journalists and human rights defenders are well within their rights and advocacy to expose the truth and demand answers. Lawyering and journalism are not crimes. What is apparent though, after two alleged ouster plots, is the regime’s is increased vindictiveness, triggered by insecurities, which stem from its inability to solve the country’s problems.

The government is accorded with power and resources, but always with accountability and duty to realize a life of dignity for its citizens. The exercise of the people’s right to resist is a reminder to governments, particularly the Philippine government, that their effort to criminalize people raising legitimate demands betrays their own insecurity and fear of accountability.

The movement built by the Filipino people for justice and accountability, whether it be on the calls for Duterte’s ouster, Duterte’s resignation, investigations by international and domestic courts, widespread protests, among others, is a valid and legitimate recourse that the Filipino people can exercise. Let us not let repressive forces make us believe otherwise. When history teaches the world that power emanates from the people, it is not mere rhetoric, but a warning to tyrants that repressive regimes.(http://bulatlat.com)

* The author is the coordinator of Tanggol Bayi, an association of women human rights defenders in the Philippines, and a member of Karapatan’s National Council.

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IP groups to candidates: Pass laws that truly benefit the people

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Indigenous People’s organizations under PASAKA presented their “Lumad Agenda” on Saturday, April 27, in a bid for the electoral candidates to hear and recognize the aspirations and rights of IPs in the country as the May elections near.

Sorsogon human rights workers under close surveillance by state operatives

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The rights workers believed the surveillance incident is a clear and present danger to their work as human rights defenders, but such harassing acts would not cow them from fulfilling their avowed tasks.

For 12 years now, ‘no stones left unturned’ as Burgos family continues search for Jonas

Photo courtesy of JL Burgos / Bulatlat

By JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
Bulatlat.com

MANILA – Family of missing activist Jonas Burgos gathered today at the Commission of Human Rights in Quezon City to deplore his continuing disappearance 12 years since his abduction.

“It has been 12 years of constancy in the search for Jonas. No stone was left unturned, no information was ignored, Intervention of all possible agencies, personalities, and communities were sought. Commitment to the vows of love and fidelity to the ways of peace urged us on,” his mother Edita Burgos said.

Jonas was abducted on April 28, 2007 in a restaurant in a Quezon City mall. His family has been searching for him ever since.

Related story: Timeline | The Search for Jonas Burgos

Despite the Supreme Court ruling back in 2013 that Jonas was indeed a victim of enforced disappearance, a military official linked to his abduction was acquitted before a Quezon City trial court in 2017, saying that there was no sufficient circumstantial evidence to prove the guilt of the accused.

Another retired ranking military official, Eduardo Año is now a cabinet secretary under the present administration.

“Yet, we know that there is hope, for what is hidden to man’s eyes is revealed at the perfect time. Meanwhile… the family holds on to the just order of the Supreme Court: ‘Return Jonas to his family.’ And for as long as this order is not complied with, we hold the government accountable for Jonas’ fate,” Burgos added.

The Burgos family were joined by relatives of enforced disappearances and senatorial candidate and martial law survivor Neri Colmenares.

Insensitive

Under the present administration, Burgos said there is “less hope” that justice will be served for victims of enforced disappearance.

The mother of the missing activist was referring to recent moves of the Duterte administration to have the 625 names of victims of enforced disappearances before a United Nations body. This, she added, only “reveals their evil design to sweep under the rug, all the cases of enforced disappearance. As if their memories would be erased if they do this.”

“This is the height of insensitivity to the plight of the families of the victims. We, victims, need to rethink … what should we do with leaders of a government who are insensitive to the least, the last and the lost?” Burgos said.

Not easy for family

In her speech, Jonas’ wife Mary Ann said that the past 12 years has not been easy for her and their daughter.

It does not help, she added, that the government has “have gone through tremendous lengths of effort in conspiring and covering up every bit of truth of their crime against us and many others like us.”

Like Burgos, Mary Ann deplored the Duterte administration’s “concept of closure” as they “intend to officially / legally disappear completely the victims along with all of us, their families” before a UN body.

Mary Ann added, “I have but this to say…so long as we, the families of the desaparecidos, have our breaths, no one can stop us in our fight to surface our disappeared loved ones, for only when they are surfaced, when the whole truth is revealed to the public and the victims and their families given justice and the guilty punished, will there be closure.” (http://bulatlat.com)

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Palaro athletes undergo earthquake, tsunami drills

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Athletes, officers and other participants to the 2019 Palarong Pambansa undergo earthquake and tsunami lectures and drills on Friday, April 26.

Salute to integrity

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The truly professional Filipino journalist seeks nothing more than to be able to “look our audience straight in the eye,” assured that we have served the people’s right to know faithfully.

Matrix, a bad omen for democracy

The “association matrix” exposed by President Duterte’s PR man, Manila Times President Emeritus Dante Ang, has not only been criticized but also laughed at by many, including those who are being accused as “conspirators” to the so-called “Oust Duterte” plot.

Without naming the source of the matrix and the dubious illustration connecting Bikoy, the anonymous uploader of the video series called “Ang Totoong Narco List” to Vera Files President Ellen Tordesillas, National Union of People’s Lawyers (NUPL), Rappler, and Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ), we can say that the “revelations” are patently false.

Since Day 1, President Rodrigo Duterte has been discrediting the media in his attempt to bury the ugly truth in his deadly “war on drugs.” Rappler has been slapped with numerous legal charges while Vera Files and PCIJ were subjected to distributed denial of service attacks (DDoS) aiming to shut down their websites after publishing stories about the undeclared BPI accounts of Duterte and his daughter Sara and the drug war and “Know Your Rights” advisories.

Recently, PCIJ released a three-part investigative report on Duterte family’s big spike in wealth. When sought for comment before the publication of the series, the Dutertes did not bother to answer, according to the PCIJ. Again, Duterte resorted to discrediting the media, branding investigative journalists as “pera-pera lang” (only after the money) instead of explaining to the public the exponential rise in his family’s wealth. Downplaying the PCIJ’s matrix of the first family’s undisclosed businesses, Duterte’s PR man produced the incredible matrix containing an unbelievable domain name server (DNS). (Maximum DNS server is only 255; therefore 266 DNS server is non-existent, according to IT experts.)

The NUPL, on the other hand, has been publicly vilified and red tagged by the Armed Forces of the Philippines for being critical of Duterte’s drug war and other repressive policies. Some of its members were killed; many others have been under surveillance and have experienced other forms of harassment from state security forces.

Painting a conspiracy among the media groups and lawyers — all perceived as enemies by Duterte — might be used to justify further draconian measures and blatant attacks.

That the release of matrix came a few days before the elections is a cause for alarm. What if the administration’s candidates lose? After ousting Supreme Court Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno, making the House of Representatives his stamp pad, Duterte is eyeing the Senate to be under his control. Just because he could not subjugate the Fourth Estate, he wields the state propaganda machinery to spread lies, including fake surveys favorable to his bets.

Remember that Duterte’s idol, the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, cited “an organized conspiracy to overthrow the government” to justify the declaration of martial law.

Duterte already threatened to suspend the writ of habeas corpus and declare a “revolutionary government” if he would be “pushed to the extreme.”

Even without the formal declaration of nationwide martial law, extrajudicial killings in the name of “drug war” and “counterinsurgency,” arrests and detention of activists, bombings in rural communities, forced evacuations and other atrocities are so appalling that the Duterte administration has surpassed the late dictator in terms of the number of victims.

How can this administration get even more monstrous? The mere thought of it is chilling but also enraging.

We must continue to be vigilant and fight tyranny. (http://bulatlat.com)

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The nexus


By DEE AYROSO
(http://bulatlat.com)

The post The nexus appeared first on Bulatlat.