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SCMP - Saturday, September 25, 2004
ASSOCIATED PRESS and REUTERS in New York
The leaders of India and Pakistan met yesterday and promised measures to gradually ease tensions between their nations and explore a peaceful settlement for the disputed Kashmir region.
After the session in a New York hotel, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf said they also discussed the possibility of running a natural gas pipeline between their nations, saying "such a project could contribute to the welfare and prosperity of the people of both countries".
Since both gained independence from Britain in 1947, the nuclear-armed neighbours have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir, which is split between them and divided by a 1972 ceasefire line called the Line of Control.
The leaders said in a joint statement yesterday that they agreed that "possible options for a peaceful negotiated settlement" for Kashmir should be explored "in a sincere spirit and purposeful manner".
"I sincerely believe that today is an historic day. We have made a new beginning," Mr Singh said.
General Musharraf said he hoped the meeting augured well for Indo-Pakistani relations.
The much-anticipated meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly followed sluggish progress in peace talks between the enemies since the Pakistani leader met Mr Singh's predecessor, Atal Behari Vajpayee, in January.
The two sides have had one round of formal talks with no breakthrough on Kashmir since Mr Singh's Congress party won a general election in mid-year.
Pakistan insists on a time frame for resolving Kashmir, while New Delhi insists Pakistan must do more to stop what it calls cross-border infiltration of militants.
The conflict has left at least 63,000 dead. India has accused Pakistan of supporting the insurgents.
During a news conference held before the pair met, General Musharraf, a key US ally in the war on terror, scoffed at a question about negotiating normalisation without focusing on a solution to the Kashmir dispute.
"Let's not sideline an issue, which is a core [issue] and we have fought wars on it," he said. "We cannot do that.
"How can any confidence, or any normalisation take place, without confronting any issues on which we have fought three wars and a number of skirmishes?
"We kill each other every day on the Line of Control. We are two angry countries. Let's resolve the cause of that anger, and then we can proceed on normalisation everywhere."
General Musharraf also said this was the last chance for a bilateral solution, hinting the help of other countries might be needed.
"I think the best option is bilateralism. But if bilateralism does not produce results, then we fail. And we failed over 50 years. So what [good] is bilateralism if it fails to produce results?"
Mr Singh told the General Assembly on Wednesday: "I reaffirm our determination to carry forward this dialogue to a purposeful and mutually acceptable conclusion."
scmp - Wednesday, September 22, 2004
ASSOCIATED PRESS in Indonesia
Updated at 1.41pm:
Presidential front-runner Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Wednesday called for a peaceful end to Indonesia's bloodiest internal conflict, the 28-year separatist war in Aceh province.
The former general and security chief in President Megawati Sukarnoputri's administration negotiated a short-lived peace deal with the Free Aceh Movement in 2003. The deal collapsed when President Megawati sided with hardline generals who launched an offensive in May last year that has left at least 2,200 people dead but has done little to end the insurgency.
Mr Yudhoyono has publicly rejected any possibility of allowing the oil and gas-rich province to secede from the sprawling archipelago nation.
"Let us not just go ahead with the military operation," Mr Yudhoyono told a group of visiting teachers at his home on the outskirts of Jakarta.
"Our country must remain united and on that there is no compromise," he said. "But [the conflict] must be resolved in a fair manner and as peacefully as possibly."
prepared during the 2nd Karapatan Congress, August 2004
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was installed as president in 2001 as a result of a People Power uprising that ousted Joseph Estrada from Malacanang. But not only did she fail to address the issues that were raised during People Power 2, her regime unleashed fascist attacks against the people and continued to violate human rights and international humanitarian law with impunity.
In less than three years, the Arroyo regime has committed 3, 133 cases of violations victimizing 172, 821 individuals, 17, 201 families, 77 communities, and 240 households. The type of violations and the corresponding number of victims are broken down as follows:
Violation Number of victims
Summary executions and massacres: 319 individuals
Frustrated killings: 59 individuals
Physical assault: 1,289 individuals
Torture: 183 individuals
Illegal arrest and detention: 1,191 individuals
Arbitrary/unlawful detention: 676 individuals
Illegal search and seizure: 5,786 individuals
Coercion: 4,559 individuals
Threats/harassments/intimidation: 26,093 individuals
Forcible evacuation/displacement: 113,211 individuals
Hamletting: 1,236 individuals
Forcible reconcentration: 896 individuals
Food and economic blockade: 1,337 individuals
Destruction of property: 12,067 individuals
Divestment of property: 8,966 individuals
As of July 2004, there are 248 political detainees all over the country.
Like its predecessors, the Arroyo regime committed these violations in its attempts to defeat the CPP-NPA-NDF and MILF, as part of its efforts to defend and promote the interests of foreign monopoly capitalists, the comprador bourgeoisie, and big landlords, and while trying to suppress the mounting opposition to its rule and the ever growing legal democratic movement.
Immediately after taking over from the Estrada administration, the Arroyo regime embarked on a desperate attempt to prop up the economy through loans while pursuing the very same imperialist-dictated policies of liberalization, deregulation, and privatization, which led to the crisis. Around 63% of the current public debt was contracted from 1997 onwards. It aggressively promoted the labor export policy even to the extent of sending OFWs in war-torn Iraq. It also leaned heavily on the AFP and PNP for support in order to stabilize its rule, suppress dissent, and wage war against all its enemies, including the CPP-NPA-NDF, the MILF, and restless elements within the AFP and PNP.
The Arroyo regime was so battered by the worsening economic, political, and social crisis confronting the semi-colonial, semi-feudal system that it was forced to announce, in 2002, that Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was not running for president in the May 2004 elections. This worsening crisis provides the context to the human rights situation. While the so-called "war against terrorism" and the pursuit of a "strong republic" provide the particularity of the human rights situation during the previous three years of the Arroyo regime and which will probably define the situation in the next six years.
The War on Terror
The Arroyo regime's war against terrorism is in support of and an imitation of the war on terror being waged by its U.S. imperialist master.
U.S. imperialism's war on terror was conceived in 1990 by ultra-rightists within the administration of George W. Bush, the father of the current U.S. president. The U.S.SR had just fallen and the Cold War had ended. Without any challenge to its political and military power, U.S. imperialism sought to assert its hegemony in order to further its interests over its economic competitors. Richard Haas, a member of the National Security Council and director of policy planning in the U.S. State Department declared that it is necessary for Americans to "reconceive their role from a traditional nation-state to an imperial power". In 1992, then Defense Secretary Dick Cheney with Paul Wolfowitz, now deputy secretary of defense, and I. Lewis Libby, now Vice-President Cheney's chief of staff came up with a top-secret blueprint for world domination called the "Defense Policy Guideline" (DPG). The DPG envisioned a world that is dominated by the unilateral and pre-emptive Use of U.S. military power and the preservation of Pax Americana that will remain unchallenged throughout the 21st century. The plan was further elaborated with the Project for a New American Century under Bush Jr.'s administration.
In order to justify an increase in U.S. military presence around the world after the end of the Cold War, Bush Sr.'s administration came up with its "rogue states" policy. The succeeding Clinton administration followed this up with its list of "terrorist states" namely, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Sudan, Cuba, and North Korea. And Bush Jr. came up with its "axis of evil". After the supposed communist threat subsided with the end of the Cold War, U.S. imperialism creatively raised the hype about the threat of Islamic fundamentalism.
The plan was being implemented at a time when the world was reeling from a crisis of overproduction. Until March 2000, the U.S. was able to maximize its politico-military hegemony and its lead in high technology to rise above the crisis affecting Europe and Japan, the two other centers of capitalism. But in March, 2000, the "new economy" bubble of the U.S. burst and it plunged into a deep recession. The crisis impelled the U.S. to aggressively pursue its drive for world domination. The September 2001 attacks provided the pretext for the war on terror.
The war on terror is a ploy to justify U.S. wars of aggression that are being launched to:
Pump prime the U.S. economy by providing business to the military industrial complex
Control the sources of oil and other raw materials as well as the markets for U.S. capital and products
Increasing U.S. military presence round the world by a new basing strategy whereby some permanent overseas bases will be replaced or downgraded in favor of small "forward operating bases" in many new locations. Added to these are the "forward operating locations" or prearranged but unmaintained staging areas which can be occupied quickly by U.S. forces in a conflict situation. Complementing these are the semi-permanent basing arrangements through continuous. joint military exercises as well as training of surrogate troops.
Break all resistance and opposition to imperialist globalization
To quote Thomas Barnett, a Professor at the U.S. Naval War College and an advisor to the Defense Department, "If we map out U.S. military responses since the end of the cold war, we find an overwhelming concentration of activity in the regions of the world that are excluded from globalization's growing Core-namely the Carribean Rim, virtually all of Africa, the Balkans, the Caucasus., Central Asia, the Middle East and Southwest Asia, and much of Southeast Asia. If a country is losing out to globalization or rejecting much of the content flows associated with its advance, there is a far greater chance that the U.S. will end up sending forces at some point. Conversely, if a country is largely functioning within globalization, we tend not to have to send our forces there to restore order to eradicate threats." In sum, it is always possible to fall off this bandwagon called globalization. And when you do, bloodshed will follow. If you are lucky, so will American troops."
The Arroyo regime's war against terrorism is meant to support the objectives of U.S. wars of aggression in exchange for Aid, loans, and a share of the crumbs. U.S. military aid increased ten-fold in 2001 compared to 2000. By 2003, the country was the world's 4th biggest recipient of Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and the world's 2nd biggest and Asia's biggest recipient of the International Military Exercise and Training Program (IMET).
The 2003 FMF grants were in support of four mobility systems, counter-terrorist modules mainly for three Light Reaction Companies or Light Infantry Battalions, engineering spares and a regional counter-terrorism program. The IMET fund went to the U.S.-based training of over 160 AFP personnel. Excess Defense Articles transfers included: 15,000 M16 rifles, 33 � -ton trucks, threeUH-1H helicopters, Humanitarian Assistance Program/Excess Property, and a Cyclone Class Ship. In October 2004, Bush further committed U.S.$ 25 million for army engineering spares, 20 UH-1H refurbished helicopters plus. 10 refurbished airframes for Use as spare parts, and another U.S. $ 10 million in Presidential Draw down Authority from existing U.S. military inventories.
The Strong Republic
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo inherited a weak state. It came to power by virtue of extra legal means, People Power 2, which is beyond the normal processes of administration change. The economy was plunging deeper into crisis especially after the 1997 Southeast Asian financial crisis. The economic crisis exacerbated the political crisis that was not resolved with the ouster of Estrada. In fact, the contradictions within the ruling class further intensified resulting in threats of coup d' etat, the massive gathering of Estrada forces at Edsa that culminated in the siege of Malacanang, the Oakwood mutiny, and the ATO tower takeover. Likewise, the legal democratic movement became stronger especially after the ouster of Estrada. Eventually, the Junk GMA movement slowly gained ground. The revolutionary movement of the CPP-NPA-NDF was advancing.
Instead of reorienting the policies of liberalization, deregulation, and privatization, which plunged the country deeper into crisis, the Arroyo regime fast tracked the implementation of these policies. It showed its total puppetry to U.S. imperialism by unabashedly supporting the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Thus, it was imperative for the Arroyo regime to "strengthen" the weak state to repress the unrest of the masses who will bear the burden of the deepening economic crisis. The strong republic was conceived in order to preemptively strike any threat to its rule, suppress dissent, and wage an all-out war against the CPP-NPA-NDF and MILF.
The grip of the Arroyo regime to power was further weakened as it had to massive corruption and fraud in order to legitimize its continued stay in Malacanang. In the end, it failed to secure a fresh mandate and its supposed "victory" further exacerbated the political crisis and created doubts on the credibility of elections as a process.
Implications on the Human Rights situation
The war on terror and the strong republic had and will have the following effects on the human rights situation:
1. increasing U.S. military presence and intervention
In 2000, the Joint U.S. Military Assistance Group and soon after, the Mutual Defense Board was revived. President Arroyo and U.S. President Bush approved a Joint Defense Assessment (JDA) of the AFP including its recommendations and implementation plan in October 2003. The JDA identified ten key areas of intervention including the critical security areas of planning, training, doctrines development, and logistics procurement. Although its projected objective is to reform, enhance, and modernize the AFP, it is a means to more strongly align the AFP with U.S. military doctrines, strategies, techniques, needs, and practices.
Aside from the military aid and the IMET, considerable influence is exerted by the U.S. through 13 regular bilateral conferences and training. There are also the 18 joint military exercises held regularly.
A new series of joint training exercises in North Cotabato started last July 26 and will end on August 14. North Cotabato was selected because of the reported presence of the MILF, which is being accused of collaborating with the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI). There are reports coming from KARAPATAN Far South Mindanao Region of the presence of US troops in Sarangani province.
The closer ties between the U.S. and RP military is laying the basis for direct U.S. military intervention in the Philippines. The U.S. Special Operation Forces are already training the AFP in counter-terrorism campaign planning, intelligence/operations fusion, psychological operations, civil-military operations, and field tactics. For example, the Force Reconnaissance Companies involved in military operations were trained by U.S. SOF.
Another manifestation of increasing U.S. direct intervention in the Philippines is the terror listing by the U.S. and the European Union of the CPP-NPA-NDF and of Jose Maria Sison. This is part of the efforts towards demonizing revolutionary forces, as what was done to Islamic fundamentalist groups, and pressuring them to surrender by blocking all political, financial, and material support that may be given to them.
2. intensifying all-out war against the CPP-NPA-NDF and the MILF
Massive military deployment and operations were monitored in Southern Tagalog (39 battalions, most especially Mindoro (9 battalions), Cagayan Valley (five battalions and 1 brigade), Western Mindanao (10 battalions), Socksargen (10 battalions), Eastern Visayas (9 battalions), Southern Mindanao (3 brigades), North Central Mindanao (3 brigades), Central Luzon (6 battalions), Bohol (4 battalions) and Cebu (2 battalions). A battalion of Scout Rangers under the command of Col. Noel Buan, former POW, intelligence officer, and one of the key officers responsible for the massive militarization in Mindoro Oriental, was recently deployed in Negros Occidental.
While the basic doctrine of Clear, Hold, Consolidate, and Develop and the Triad Operations, which include Intelligence, Operations, and Civilian-Military Operations, are being implemented, certain adaptations and adjustments in tactics were revealed. Common among the reports is the employment of Reengineered Special Operations Teams, which was deployed under Oplan Bantay Laya in 2003. Complementing the squad-size RSOT units are platoon size mobile units in contiguous communities as well as numerous small detachments.
Parallel to the RSOT operations are combat and security operations employing company to battalion size coordinated operations; establishment of an intelligence network up to the barangay level; and CAFGU/CAA formations organized through forced conscription and the use of psywar operations and open terror at the grassroots level. Aside from this, AFP units that specialize in counter guerrilla tactics, under the Special Operations Command (SOCOM) such as Scout Rangers, Special Forces of the PA, Force Reconnaissance teams of the PM, SEALS of the PN, serve as standby forces for rapid deployment to various areas.
Reinforcing the AFP, PNP, and CAA forces are "rebel returnees", vigilante groups and para-military groups like the CPLA, the RPA-ABB, and the RHB.
These resulted in a long list of documented cases of killings, massacres, forcible abductions and disappearances, forced evacuation and reconcentration, fake surrenders, indiscriminate firing and bombings of communities of peasants and indigenous peoples and suspected guerrilla lairs and strongholds.
Karapatan-Southern Tagalog documented the most number of human rights violation cases with a total of 1,268. The Southern Mindanao Region documented 472 cases; Bicol - 379, Western Mindanao - 374, North Central Mindanao - 267, Cagayan Valley - 185, and the CARAGA region - 147 cases.
Meanwhile, captured members of the NPA rendered hors de combat in legitimate clashes between the AFP and NPA forces are maltreated, tortured and eventually killed. These are clear and gross violations of international humanitarian law embodied in international instruments as well as the CARHRIHL signed by the GRP and NDFP in August, 1998.
In Mindanao, 33 bombing incidents occurred under the Arroyo administration. These incidents claimed 95 lives, and caused injuries to 450 others. To date, not one of these bombing incidents had been solved. Aside from these "mysterious bombings, incidents of forcible displacements affecting almost half a million Moros and Christians were caused by military offensives in North Cotabato, Lanao del Norte, Maguindanao, and the Zamboanga Peninsula. Moro people in NCR were victims of racial profiling, indiscriminate raids, random arrests, torture, and extraction of forced confessions.
All regions monitored an increase in troop deployment and military operations, and consequently, an increasing trend in human rights violations. In Eastern Visayas, four more battalions were added in 2004. Before 2001, there were only 17 battalions in Southern Tagalog. The 22 new battalions were added only during the last three years. Karapatan-Southern Mindanao recorded a 245% increase in the number of human rights violations from 2002-2004 compared to 2001. In Bohol, the number of recorded cases of human rights violations as of August 2004 had already surpassed the total number of cases recorded during the whole year of 2003.
3. constriction of civil liberties
Repressive decrees and jurisprudence passed since the days of Martial Law are still in force. In fact, some of these are being used currently to justify the suppression of dissent. The basis for the "no permit, no rally" policy, which is being used to justify the violent dispersal of mobilizations and protest actions can be traced to Batas Pambansa 880 passed during Martial Law. Violent dispersals of peaceful demonstrations were recorded in Baguio, NCR, Cebu, and Iloilo.
General Order #66 serves as the basis for setting-up checkpoints. Warrantless arrests are being justified through the Umil vs Ramos Supreme Court decision and other jurisprudence.
Worse, repressive bills that were proposed during the Ramos regime but were withdrawn because of protests are being revived. Among the bills that have been recently refiled in Congress are the Anti-Terrorism Bill and the National Identification System. Likewise, proposals for amending the 1987 Constitution are still pending. Among the proposed amendments is the reformulation of provisions that protect civil liberties.
4. intensifying exploitation and repression of the basic masses
The Cordillera people are struggling against the intensification of mining operations. Cebu will likewise be subjected to mining operations. The biggest mining corporation operating in the country, the Sagittarius Mining, Inc., formerly Western Mining Corporation, has been mining in an area that straddles four provinces. In has displaced B'laan communities from their ancestral domain. In Cagayan Valley, six major projects being implemented by the government with the comprador bourgeoisie and big landlords will encompass 179,000 hectares displacing approximately 635.400 individuals. Two big landlords, Cojuangco and Lorenzo, have plantations covering 30,000 hectares each in Socksargen.
Land grabbing cases were reported in Negros Occidental. In Northern Leyte, where most big landlords in the province are concentrated, peasants involved in land struggles are arrested en masse resulting in the most number of political prisoners, 35, in the whole of Eastern Visayas. Cases of criminalization of agrarian cases were documented in Cebu, Negros Occidental, and North Central Mindanao. The AFP is positioned in areas where there are CADC, CBFMA, IFMA, logging and mining areas. Bohol is being militarized not only because of the alleged presence of the NPA but also because it is the site of various government projects such as a Palm Oil plantation, regional airport, circumferential project, Bohol Irrigation Project II and the Leyte-Bohol Interconnection project. While the most militarized areas in Negros Oriental are in Guihulngan because of land struggles. These point to the trend towards an increase in agrarian and land-grabbing issues especially as land and crop conversion schemes are fast-tracked and agricultural and fisheries modernization programs are intensified.
Documented cases of violation of workers rights have increased in the span of three years under GMA. The practice of union busting is prevalent in most companies. The workers of Nestle have been on strike since Feb 2002. Legitimate unions at SM, PT&T, LRT, Cosmos Bottling, Meralco, Nestle-Magnolia, Sulpicio Lines, Philippine Rabbit, Bombo Radyo, PNOC, among others were repressed and militant workers terminated and replaced by contractual workers. Workers from IBM, a federation of unions of the Cojuangco group of companies, are experiencing various forms of harassments such as withholding of union dues.
The Center for Trade Union and Human Rights documented 91 cases (involving 1,857 workers) of attacks on picketlines, arrest of union leaders and termination of workers participating in strikes. Violent dispersals of picketlines were also reported in Southern Tagalog and Cebu.
Military and local police forces are regularly employed to harass, violently disperse and arbitrary arrest union members. Arrested workers are charged with common crimes such as assault on persons of authority, robbery, destruction of property, etc.
Demolitions of urban poor communities were reported in almost all regions with urban centers such as Baguio, NCR, Iloilo, and Misamis Oriental, Southern Mindanao Region, and Pagadian City.
5. further attacks on the legal democratic movement
Harassments of NGOs, POs, and other progressive groups and individuals became rampant during the three years of the Arroyo regime. Four cases of raids of offices and harassments of members of legitimate organizations were reported by the Cordillera region. Five POs experienced harassments in North Central Mindanao. KMP and Anakbayan officers and organizers were harassed in Southern Mindanao. Other cases of harassments were reported in Central Luzon, Southern Tagalog, North Central Mindanao, and Caraga region.
Cases of campus repression were documented in NCR and Southern Mindanao. Even church people were not spared from harassments and repression. MSM sisters in an IP community in Socksargen were accused by the military of aiding NPA guerillas and were told to leave the area. Six journalists were killed in 2004 alone.
Worse are the killings of members of legitimate organizations. Since 2001, 44 members of Bayan Muna, eight members of Anakpawis, and four organizers of Anak ng Bayan were murdered. Two more organizers of Anak ng Bayan were abducted. And an officer of Anakpawis in Quezon, Tata Pido, was shot.
Luckily he survived.
Fourteen human rights workers were killed. The number of human rights workers killed during the Arroyo regime surpassed even during the period of Martial law. Fewer human rights workers were killed then. It was not even clear whether they were killed or abducted because of their human rights work or their other involvements. During the Aquino regime, human rights workers were harassed but short of being physically attacked. One TFDP worker was shot at by a CAFGU member during a fact-finding mission but this was the only case.
Thus, the brutal killing of Eden Marcellana, Karapatan Secretary General for Southern Tagalog in April 2003 followed by the twin killings of an active human rights lawyer, Atty. Juvy Magsino and human rights worker Leima Fortu in Feb 2004 was shocking. These summary executions were even systematically perpetrated by elements under the command of the notorious 204th Infantry Battalion in Mindoro Oriental.
6. increasing number of political prisoners and criminalization of political offenses
To date, there are 248 political prisoners in the country. Among them are minors, mothers with their children, and elderly persons. One of the most long-standing political detainees is Donato Continente who has served his minimum sentence but could not be released due to the direct intervention of the U.S. State Department. Continente was a suspect in the killing of Colonel James Rowe of the JUSMAG in 1989. Recently arrested was Ed Serrano, an NDF personality covered by a JASIG. Serrano was arbitrarily arrested, denied of his right to counsel while being held incommunicado for 10 days, and charged with criminal offenses.
Most of the political prisoners are victims of arbitrary arrest and detention. Among them are peasants struggling for their right to till their land, political activists, suspected NPA and MILF supporters, and ordinary Muslim, presented and paraded before the media as fall guys in the government's campaign against "terrorism".
Criminalization of political offenses or acts and/or agrarian /labor cases is the norm. Criminal cases like murder, kidnapping, robbery have been filed against them and most if not all are detained together with ordinary and hardened criminals. They have suffered under the deplorable conditions of congested and poorly maintained jails, compared to the privileged house detention of former Pres. Joseph Estrada, accused of plunder cases.
The declaration of the GRP to release a number of political prisoners as part of the confidence building measure to the peace negotiations between the GRP and NDFP has not been fully implemented. Only 17 out of the 32 political prisoners promised to set free have been released so far.
Despite the court's decision that allows them to post bail, more than 321 members of the AFP who were involved in the Oakwood incident are still detained in various detention centers and camps and denied their right to post bail. Detained for almost a year now, all they wanted was to voice out their grievances against corruption in the military and denounce the involvement of the military in the series of bombings in Mindanao, as well as the connivance between the AFP and Abu Sayaf, which resulted to scores of civilian casualties.
7. no justice for victims of human rights violations
After 17 long years of struggle and securing a favorable decision in the class suit filed against the Marcos family, the victims of human rights violations under the Marcos fascist dictatorship have yet to receive justice and indemnification. The Arroyo regime has so far failed to set the mechanism to ensure the compensation process. A bill filed in the 12th Congress that seeks to compensate the victims of martial law (HB 4535 and Senate Bill 1877) was mangled and diluted to allow the Marcos family to escape from their responsibility of answering for their crimes. Thus, the proposed bill was rejected by the victims. Up to this day, the 9,539 victims of torture, summary execution and disappearances during the martial law period still clamor for justice and indemnification.
The Arroyo administration lacks the political will to implement the decisions of the US District Court of Hawaii and the Supreme Court of the Philippines with regard to the compensation of victims of injustice. It also has not complied with its commitment to the peace negotiations with the NDFP that it will facilitate the indemnification of the victims. Meanwhile, the victims fear that the recovered Marcos' loot that was transferred to the national treasury in early 2004 may have been spent or are dwindling after being reverted to the national coffers during the May election campaign period.
Under the current dispensation, there can be no justice for victims of human rights violations. The most that the victims of Martial Law can hope for is to be granted a small compensation for their sufferings. Although this will be a symbolic indictment of the Marcoses, the victims will not be able to achieve full and genuine justice.
All factions of the ruling class are united in one thing, exploiting, oppressing, repressing, and attacking the masses. No regime was able to prosecute and convict its predecessor for fear of being prosecuted by its successor. Not even Cory Aquino was able to prosecute the Marcoses for assassinating her husband, Ninoy Aquino.
Only the masses themselves have the political will and commitment to pursue justice to the end. In the final analysis, only the masses themselves can and will establish a society where genuine peace, justice, prosperity, equity, freedom, and democracy reigns.