Thursday, December 3, 2009

UN experts: End elite hold on RP politics

From Philippine Daily Inquirer, Reuters

GENEVA — Investigations into the deaths of 57 people in an election-related massacre in southern Philippines must be the start of a major reform process in the country, two United Nations human rights experts said on Wednesday.

The two experts called for the “effective” prosecution of those behind the killings and an end to manipulation by the elite of the country’s election process.

The authorities must also put in place immediate measures to prevent similar murders in the run-up to elections next May, said the experts, who report to the UN Human Rights Council on extrajudicial killings and on freedom of expression.

“The premeditated killing of political opponents, combined with a massive assault on the media, must be tackled at various levels that go well beyond standard murder investigations,” declared the two experts, Philip Alston and Frank La Rue.

The massacre took place in Maguindanao province on Nov. 23 in the Philippines’ deadliest ever election-related crime. The killings were blamed on members of the Ampatuan family, whom President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has in the past called valuable political allies.

Threat to democracy

Alston and La Rue said the inquiry “must be followed by effective prosecutions of all those responsible for the killings.”

But the massacre should also spark extensive reflection “on the elite family-dominated manipulation of the political processes and the need to eliminate such practices in order to assure the future of democracy in the Philippines,” they said.

The two UN experts—Alston from the United States and La Rue from Guatemala—said any broad inquiry into the country’s political system would have to focus on how to improve protection for journalists, 30 of whom died in the massacre.

Even more urgent was the creation of a task force to prevent more election-related killings.

“There is every indication that the run-up to the May elections will sound the death knell for many political activists,” the two added.

UN intervention

In Manila, journalists said Philippine media groups might ask the United Nations to intervene in the probe of the massacre.

“We’re considering all options, including asking the UN rights body to step into the massacre,” Melinda Quintos de Jesus, executive director of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility, told reporters, adding the local press must “not drop the ball to allow the suspects to get away with the murders.”

Int’l press group’s mission

International press groups were also sending a mission to the Philippines to look into the massacre.

Around 15 delegates from groups like the International Federation of Journalists, the Southeast Asian Press Alliance, and the Committee to Protect Journalists were expected to arrive in Manila this weekend, according to National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) board member Rowena Paraan.

“This shows that there is international attention on the incident, as it should be. The trip will also be an expression of solidarity with local journalists,” Paraan said.

Paraan said members of the media would march on the Don China Roces Bridge (formerly Mendiola) on Dec. 9 as part of the Global Day of Action for the slain journalists.

In a report released Thursday, a fact-finding team that went to Maguindanao observed that police had handled evidence poorly, leading to its possible contamination.

“There was little or no consideration given to preserving the evidence. There was little or no consideration given to avoid the contamination of the crime scene,” the report said.

The group said the vehicles used by the suspects in stopping a convoy carrying journalists and relatives of a clan opposed to the Ampatuans were still unaccounted for.

“Investigators said the suspects also used a Nissan Frontier pickup with police markings. One such police vehicle issued to the Maguindanao police is still unaccounted for. This jibes with claims by (witnesses) that police vehicles were involved in the blockade,” the team said.

‘Culture of fear and silence’

The killings have stoked fear among students in some areas of Mindanao.

Fr. Edgardo Tanudtanud, OMI, director of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP) for Central Mindanao, cited a recent incident in which several students, out of fear, canceled their participation in a march for peace in Cotabato.

“It has created a culture of fear and silence among the people, including the students, Christians and Muslims alike. But that fear did not stem from that massacre incident alone, but because of the history of violence in the area,” Tanudtanud said.

In a statement, the association of 1,272 member schools, colleges and universities said: “This mass murder ... has showcased the extent corrupt individuals are willing to go in order to arrogate the power to themselves.”

Msgr. Gerry Santos, president of the CEAP, said the group was demanding long-term solutions to the decades-old conflict that had forced Maguindanaoans to live in fear and subhuman conditions.

“We ask the government to dismantle private armies and put an end to the anarchy of clans in the region,” Santos said. Reports from Reuters, Alcuin Papa and Tina G. Santos

(Comment: I have been advocating this issue since my high school years, but nobody seemed to mind what I was saying back in the days. So, there it is, mga kababayan, it took more than 20 years before this issue of private armies -- due to corruption and corrupt mentality of many of our kababayan -- reached the UN. How long will many of our kababayan will 'play deaf and mute' regarding our local politics? It's time to change our leaders. We need new politicians, new names, new personalities, new and updated ideas on how to develop our country, new strategies to overcome poverty and unemployment, new minds that will effect CHANGES in the country. If these old politicians (and those young ones who are just copy-cats of these old politicians and are trying to continue their corrupt practices) did bring good life to Filipinos during their terms, then let us change them with better and younger politicians who have real plans for the betterment of our starving population. Huwag na tayong magmatigas ulo dahil hindi epektibo ang mga corrupt na politicinas na ito. Dahil guwapo, kilala, mapera, sikat, kababaryo, o kaibigan natin, huwag iboto! Piliin natin ang mga hindi kilala ngunit me pag-ibig sa bayan at hindi mga magnanakaw. Kapag pinili natin ang dating mga pangalan ng mga lumang kandidatong ito, itaga natin sa bato, another 6 years na kahirapan ang bansa natin at 6 years na pagkukuskos ng kubeta ng mga amo natin sa abroad ang naghihintay sa atin. Hindi na tayo nagsawa. Hindi na tayo natoto. Galit na sa atin ang Diyos dahil sa katigasan ng ulo natin!

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