Relatives and friends of victims

hold monthly gathering, warn of more human

 rights violations with the implementation

of the Anti-Terror Law in July

 

UP Diliman Campus

 

Bonus Tracks: "Takes more than guns to kill a man"

 

 

June 23, 2007

 

 

 

◄ Evangeline Hernandez (left) and Linda Cadapan hold photos of their daughters who were victims, respectively of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances at the foot of the monument of Andres Bonifacio at the UP Vinzons Hall.

 

   

 

690 - Tigil Paslang count on June 27, 2006

See related link:   Tigil Paslang Launching June 27, 2006

 

866 - Tigil Paslang count on June 23, 2007

+176 or 1 killed every other day

over the past  12 months !@#$%^&*()_+<>

/p
Google
 
/p
           

 

Press Statement

June 20, 2007


Calls for the removal of all military troops in urban & rural communities; Human Security Act to lead to more military presence in urban and rural communities - EMJP

The Ecumenical Movement for Justice and Peace (EMJP), together with other human rights organizations, raises its voice today in opposing the implementation of the Human Security Act of 2007 or Republic Act 9372 or simply called the Anti-Terror Law.

We believe that this law will just put the Filipinos at the mercy of the State and its military, which, through the Anti-Terror Council, has the sole authority to determine who among us can be called "terrorists".

As advocates of peace, we are against this law as it will justify the continued militarization of our communities. With this law, virtual martial rue will be imposed over the civilian populace, as the military will be given wide powers of "fighting" so-called terrorists.

We have seen how fear is instilled among the people in the communities in various provinces like Nueva Ecija, Sorsogon, the Eastern Visayas region, Compostela Valley, the Caraga and Western Mindanao provinces, among others, by the presence of virtual military rule in these areas. The extrajudicial killings, disappearances, bombing of communities and forced evacuations as well as torture and harassments of civilians just suspected or labeled as members of "fronts organizations" or suspected to be outright members of "communist groups or the NPA's," have already victimized thousands of our countrymen under the Arroyo regime, even without this dreaded draconian measure. We fear the worsening of this already horrible state of human rights if the Anti-Terror law will be allowed to take effect on July 14.

Militarization in the rural areas takes the form of what the military calls Barangay Defense System (BDS) in rural communities. They claim its legitimacy under Executive Order #21. Such a mechanism they say is very vital in crushing the armed insurgency in the country. These BDS' are military checkpoints manned by civilian residents and military men who set up the checkpoints.

Likewise, each household is required to "volunteer" a member of their family to man the said checkpoint 24 hours a day and to provide the logistical need of that person ( i.e. food). They are not paid to do this job.

In Castilla, Sorsogon, prior to the elections, the community was told by government soldiers supervising the BDS that after the elections the BDS will become a Barangay Defense Force, where each BDF will be given arms.

These BDS's regulate the movement of the people in their own communities, requiring each one to own a resident certificate or a sedula which is used as some sort of ID to enter or exit one's own community and requiring each one to sign up in logbooks on every BDS they stop over. Bags are also inspected.

In the urban poor communities, military presence is still felt. Some soldiers have remained. They just don't wear their uniforms and are disguised as "residents" who live in rented shacks. There is also the Barangay Intelligence Network, which was instilled by the previous Civil Military Operations Group, to watch out for those they have identified to belong to progressive people's organizations.

Through the Human Security Act, we will not see the last of these repressive forces that are out not to protect us but to further instigate human rights violations with the blessings of such a law.

We continue to state that military presence has done nothing good to the people in the urban and rural communities but have been in fact the source of terror in their hearts and the cause of human rights violations against peace loving citizens.

We do not need the soldiers in our communities who sow terror in our hearts, what we need is to be left to live our lives peacefully and our rights to be respected. Thus, the anti-Terror Law, which will justify more military presence, must be scrapped. ###
 

Reference: Girlie T. Padilla (09209000291)
Secretary General
2/F Erythrina Bldg.,
#1Maaralin cor. Matatag Sts.,
Brgy. Central, Diliman, Quezon City
Tel. No: (632) 4342837
e-mail:
emjp2005@gmail.com

     

Press Conference denouncing the non-stop

 killings and abductions and demanding repeal

of the Anti-Terror Law

June 20, 2007

     
     
     
     
 
     
 

Monthly gathering of relatives

and human rights group at UP Campus

June 23, 2007

     
      National Artist Prof. Bienvenido Lumbera

▲ Dr. Edita Burgos, mother of abducted Jonas Burgos;

Prof. Roselle Pineda (center) performing a tagulaylay and Prof Edel Garcellano reciting his poems about killings and abductions

           
           
           

 

The ordeal of Pastor Berlin Guerrero in the hands of the military as narrated by his wife had the relatives, friends and human rights workers wondering when all the horrors of the killings and abductions would end, or if the government is interested at all in arresting the serial killers. Photos (top, left) show the torture scars on the face and body of Pastor Guerrero. The banner (below, right) has the killings counter at 866.

 

           
           
     
     

Marchers walk past the UP Palma Hall where UP students Karen Empeño and Sherlyn Cadapan once studied. Both were abducted a year ago, on June 26, 2006

     
           
           
Statements and Mews Features

 

Nordis Weekly: Military harasses NGO workers in the Cordillera

Kalikasan condemns killing of Mario Auxilio,says extrajudicial killings of environmental activists continues

 

Desaparecidos UN press release Hustisya Interfaith -JPIC Network Karapatan PCPR

 

■  CODAL slams new slays of lawyers

■  KARAPATAN: Trillanes probe asked to open safehouses, secret detention places

■  Tribune: Gov’t hit for ‘wasting’ EU aid Gov’t hit for ‘wasting’ EU aid

■  Gov't Troops Should Stop Harassing Health Personnel -- HEAD

■  Ka Bel: PNP, AFP, GMA government cannot be trusted with a weapon such as the Human Security Act

 

 

           
BONUS TRACKS
           

 

"Takes more than guns to kill a man"

 

 

Joe Hill, 1979-1915, was an itinerant worker in the American West who became a member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) union. He was forever organizing workers, writing political songs and poems and making speeches.
 

 

 

I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night
by Alfred Hayes, 1930


I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night,
Alive as you and me.
Says I "But Joe, you're ten years dead"
"I never died" said he,
"I never died" said he.

"In Salt Lake, Joe," says I to him,
him standing by my bed,
"They framed you on a murder charge,"
Says Joe, "But I ain't dead,"
Says Joe, "But I ain't dead."

"The Copper Bosses killed you Joe,
they shot you Joe" says I.
"Takes more than guns to kill a man"
Says Joe "I didn't die"
Says Joe "I didn't die"

 

And standing there as big as life
and smiling with his eyes.
Says Joe "What they can never kill
went on to organize,
went on to organize"

From San Diego up to Maine,
in every mine and mill,
where working-men defend their rights,
it's there you find Joe Hill,
it's there you find Joe Hill!

I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night,
alive as you and me.
Says I "But Joe, you're ten years dead"
"I never died" said he,
"I never died" said he.

 

Download the song "I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night", sang by Joan Baez

           

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