No images? Click here TORCHED Maj. Gen. Juvymax Uy, the commander of the Philippine Army’s 6th Infantry Division (right), inspects the brand-new police car torched by Islamic State-linked Moro gunmen who attacked a predominantly Muslim community of Datu Piang town, Maguindanao province, on Thursday night. —FERDINAND CABRERA/CONTRIBUTOR RegionsLos Baños folkdecry mayor’s slayThe killing of Los Baños Mayor Caesar Perez sent shock waves across the university town in Laguna province where he had served for two decades. Perez, 66, was shot twice in the head by still unidentified assailants at the municipal hall compound on Thursday night. In 2019, he won a fresh mandate despite being included in President Duterte’s “narcolist” two years earlier. —STORY BY KIMMY BARAOIDAN AND MARICAR CINCO Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/regions NewsDu30: ‘No one is safeuntil everyone is safe’Addressing the UN General Assembly online for the second time this year, President Duterte on Friday urged other countries to cooperate with the initiatives of the global body in ensuring universal access to COVID-19 vaccines that were still under development. According to Mr. Duterte, not even wealthy nations can be safe unless the whole world is protected from the deadly coronavirus. —STORY BY LEILA S. SALAVERRIA Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/Leila Salaverria To Be You‘Quaran-flings’ and other issues of quarantine romancesThe COVID-19 pandemic has been difficult for all of us in different ways. One of the things that everyone is struggling with right now is the inability to physically be with our friends, our relatives and significant others. -STORY BY NIÑA RODRIGUEZ/CONTRIBUTOR Read more: lifestyle.inquirer.net/2bu To Be YouMaking music together, physically apartAdjusting to the new online setup has been a struggle for everyone, having to abruptly and quickly learn their way around unfamiliar territory. Undoubtedly, those in the performing industry are among the many who have been trying to adapt, and the Philippine Suzuki Youth Orchestra (PSYO) is no exception. -STORY BY NOELLE PATERNO/CONTRIBUTOR Read more: lifestyle.inquirer.net/2bu Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletters and get your latest news and important updates straight to your device. Banner storyVaccine deal seen to deliver shot of confidence for PH economyBy Nikka G. Valenzuela The human rights organization Karapatan on Friday accused ranking officers of the government’s anti-insurgency task force of violating a 2009 law covering crimes against humanity for labeling the group as a front for communist rebels which had led to the killing of several of its members. In a complaint filed in the Office of the Ombudsman, Karapatan said the officers of the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac) should be held criminally and administratively liable for their “persistent, relentless and malicious Red-tagging and vilification” of the group. It said that Hermogenes Esperon Jr. and Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr., as well as staunch Duterte supporters Lorraine Badoy and Mocha Uson violated the Philippine Act on Crimes Against International Humanitarian Law, Genocide and Other Crimes Against Humanity. Esperon is President Duterte’s national security adviser and vice chair of the NTF-Elcac and Parlade is its spokesperson. Communications Undersecretary Badoy is a member of the task force and Uson is deputy administrator of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration and a blogger who uses her platform to link Karapatan to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), according to Cristina Palabay, Karapatan secretary general. The complaint alleged that the respondents specifically committed crimes against humanity for persecuting civilians. This violation carries the administrative liability of gross misconduct, according to the complaint. The complaint was filed on the second anniversary of the creation of the NTF-Elcac through Executive Order No. 70 signed by the President. According to Palabay, Red-tagging, or the branding of a person or a group as part of the communist insurgency or an enemy of the state, violated the “principle of distinction” under international humanitarian law. The baseless branding of individuals as communists converts their status from civilians to armed combatants, which subjects them to attacks by state forces and their “proxies,” the complaint said. Karapatan enumerated a number of civilians who have been Red-tagged prior to their abduction or killing. The list included Zara Alvarez, a former education director of Karapatan, who was gunned down last August in Bacolod City. The Commission on Human Rights had earlier cited reports that Alvarez was on a list of people that the Department of Justice wanted to tag as terrorists but was later removed. Aside from Karapatan, the Makabayan bloc in the House of Representatives and its allied organizations, including Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan), had also been Red-tagged. “This blatant disregard of the principle of distinction resulting in the deaths of civilians constitutes the war crime” the complaint said, citing the law’s provision punishing anyone for “intentionally directing attacks against the civilian population ... or against individual civilians not taking direct part in hostilities.” It said Esperon and the others were liable either as superior or commander, or for performing or ordering, soliciting, inducing or tolerating “the commission of a war crime.” ‘Proud’ Esperon had no immediate comment on the complaint, saying he hasn’t seen it. But he said that during a recent Senate inquiry on Red-tagging, former rebel cadres “have pointed to the Makabayan representatives as being members of the CPP and are in full support of the NPA.” “I must say that I am proud to inform the public that the Makabayan bloc as well as Karapatan do not condemn the violent acts of the NPA nor do they consider the NPA as enemies of the state,” he said. Esperon also slammed Makabayan and other “front organizations” for denying any responsibility for the decision of their members to join the NPA. “This is the height of irresponsibility as these front organizations have been responsible for the radicalization of their members. That after radicalization, many of their members join the NPA,” he said. Badoy said the complaint will “certainly not stop us from defending and protecting the Filipino people from this malevolent terrorist group and ending the 52-year reign of terror” of the CPP-NPA. Rep. Carlos Zarate of Bayan Muna, one of the Makabayan party list members, said failure to condemn the NPA was not a crime in the same way that supporters of the President who do not condemn Chinese encroachment in the West Philippine Sea could not be accused of supporting China’s actions. He said Makabayan was working for social reforms through elections and legislation, and would fight a plan by the NTF-Elcac to keep out of future polls. Palabay said their lawyers noted that Philippine laws provide “expansive protection against the persecution of the fundamental rights,” and that even the Constitution protects personal security. Unionist arrested On the same day that Karapatan filed its complaint at the Office of the Ombudsman in Quezon City, plainclothes officers who identified themselves as members of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group arrested a labor union organizer in Mexico town, Pampanga province. The Central Luzon regional police office confirmed the arrest of Jose Bernardino, a member of the Workers’ Alliance and Bayan, but did not give details. The Inquirer has learned that he carried a P4-million bounty. The Central Luzon regional police confirmed his arrest but declined to give details. Activist groups said the arrest warrant served on Bernardino was “recycled” from an arrest made in 2006 based on a charge of illegal possession of explosives. Bernardino was arrested that year together with six leaders of the transport group Pinagkaisang Samahan ng mga Tsuper at Operators Nationwide (Piston). Other militant groups said the series of arrests of activists “only aims to silence and criminalize dissent.” “Arrest and repression of labor rights advocates should not be used to cover up for the government’s negligence,” the Workers’ Right Watch said in a statement. —WITH REPORTS FROM LEILA B. SALAVERRIA AND TONETTE OREJAS
Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialFilth and human neglectLeptospirosis cases have swamped the National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI), which had to convert its gym into a ward for patients suffering from this ailment. A total of 89 patients have been admitted since Nov. 12, said NKTI executive director Rose Marie Liquete. This is the day Typhoon ‘Ulysses’ cut a swathe through much of Luzon, including Metro Manila, Bicol, and Northern Luzon. Leptospirosis is far more than just a disease caused by the urine of infected animals in the mud and floods left behind by weather disturbances. It is, in essence, a disease caused by environmental negligence and human indifference. There are things we can still do to stem the tide of ‘lepto’ infestations. Health Secretary Francisco Duque has called on local government units, specifically their mayors, to fight the disease by improving garbage collection. It is garbage, after all, that attracts ‘lepto’-infested rodents and other creatures. After contact with floodwater, say medical experts, people should immediately wash their feet and legs with clean water and soap and, if possible, disinfect afterwards. Liquete cannot emphasize this enough: ‘The most important factor in preventing the disease is keeping a clean environment.’ Read more: opinion.inquirer.net |
Friday, December 4, 2020
Rights group files raps vs anti-Red task force. Inquirer Newsletter. December 05, 2020
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
insidecroydon posted: " Become a Patron! What's on inside Croydon: Click here for the latest events listing...
No comments:
Post a Comment