Sponsored Links
Tera Gold
Dresses
Diablo 3 Gold
China Wholesale
Bluetooth Headset
Fashion Bridal Dresses
HOME     |     LATEST STORIES     |     OPINION & ANALYSIS     |     SPECIAL REPORTS     |     MULTIMEDIA     Video     Slideshow     Audio/Podcasts     Webcasts
May 22, 2012
Manila, Philippines
Support progressive journalism.
Donate to Bulatlat.
SLIDESHOW Women slam Aquino’s inaction on price hikes
VIDEO On Labor Day, Workers call on Aquino to implement pro-people policies
STREET SHOOTER
Street Shooter: Old and New
SALUNGGUHIT Salungguhit: The face of poverty and struggle
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Photo of the week: Sidewalk fast food
TOP STORIES
Groups score continuing rights abuses as Philippines undergoes review by UN body
Claims that US will aid Philippines against China just ‘fantasy’
Solidarity mission for victims of military abuses in Agusan del Sur held
OPINION
A plea for plain justice and a dash of humanity
Abused and unused
The Yankees are back
MUST-READS
Anti-mining campaign gaining ground in Ilocos
Five years of searching for Jonas Burgos
Philippines tops list of world’s most disaster-hit countries in 2011
BROWSE BY SECTION OR SUBJECT
Politics
Economy
Human Rights
OFWs & Migration
Agrarian Reform
Labor & Employment
Urban Poor
Environment
Education
Youth
Indigenous Peoples
Women & Children
Health
Media
Culture
Poetry
Analysis & Opinion
Regions
International
Democratic Space
Press Releases
Downloads


Abductions, Torture, Killings and Lies: All in a Day’s Work for the Mercenary AFP

Published on May 28, 2006

BY DEE AYROSO
Bulatlat

It’s now mid-2006, and the killings and abductions, as well as the AFP and Malacañang’s lies have yet to stop.

In March 1989, Honor Ayroso, then a 21-year-old leader of the League of Filipino Students, was abducted. That week, nine other activists from Nueva Ecija also went missing. The 10 were supposed to hold a meeting in Mandaluyong in Metro Manila.

For days, Honor’s parents along with the families of the others abducted went the rounds of police stations and Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) headquarters but were given the standard reply: “No, we don’t have them, no; we don’t know anything about them.”

After a week of lies and denials, Honor and his companions were surfaced and presented to the media by the military, their names attached to their corresponding “rank and position” as “cadres of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army” who were bagged in a joint operation by elements of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (ISAFP), and the Capitol Regional Command of the Philippine Constabulary or Capcom (to be later renamed as the Philippine National Police or PNP).

It was then that Honor’s group, which came to be known as the “Pasig 10” were able recount their ordeal, of abduction and torture in an ISAFP safehouse. Torture included electrocution, “water cure”, aside from the usual karate chops and beatings.

Charges of illegal possession of a firearm and inciting to sedition were filed against the 10, which included activist leaders of the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan-Nueva Ecija (Bayan or New Patriotic Alliance), Alliance of Concerned Teachers and a health NGO. The Capcom claimed they found a gun in the house where the 10 were supposed to meet.

In March 1990, after a year in detention, a Pasig Regional Trial Court judge dismissed the case against the Pasig 10. The gun was obviously planted, said the judge.

Thirteen years later, on February 9, 2002, Honor and Johnny Orcino, a Bayan Muna activist-friend were abducted, this time in San Jose City, Nueva Ecija. It was my turn, as Honor’s wife, to search for him at the headquarters of the police and military, and listen to their denials and lies.

But this time, nobody owned up to the abduction and the two never surfaced.

A week before Honor and Johnny were abducted, two other Bayan Muna activists were also abducted in Aurora province, and in a manner which makes their abductors’ identity so obvious: an armored personnel carrier blocked their tricycle, after which their abductors forced them to transfer to a white van. The two are still missing

Johnny, a former officer of Bayan-Central Luzon, had his own share of military brutality in December 1990, when he and his wife were abducted from their home in Muñoz, Nueva Ecija. Intelligence officers of the Phil. Constabulary took the couple to a safehouse where they underwent physical and psychological torture.

Given the military’s style, capability and motive to do harm to Honor and Johnny, we have no other suspect in the abduction but the military, this time, under Pres. Arroyo.

After Honor and Johnny went missing in 2002, Army spokesperson Lt. Col. Jose Mabanta claimed that there was a “second wave of purge” within the CPP, and that my husband and other victims of abductions and killings might have been done in by “their comrades.” The AFP went as far as digging up what they called a mass grave of victims of the CPP purges. For all we know, those could have been victims of the military.

It’s now 2006, and the killings and abductions, as well as the AFP and Malacañang’s lies have yet to stop. We are still hearing their stories of “purging” and “mass graves”, of assassination plots and CPP titles and for all we know, the tortured Erap supporter could have very ably tortured himself while in ISAFP captivity.

Pages: 1 2

RELATED CONTENT

Abductions, Torture, Killings and Lies: All in a Day’s Work for the Mercenary AFP

Abductions, Torture, Killings and Lies: All in a Day’s Work for the Mercenary AFP

ARTICLE TOOLS
Printer-Friendly Version Printer-Friendly Version

TAGS
CATEGORIES
REPRINT
Feel free to reprint, repost or republish this material. (Read Bulatlat's syndication policy.)

Leave a Comment

HUMAN RIGHTS
Groups score continuing rights abuses as Philippines undergoes review by UN body
Rights groups to file complaint vs Aquino administration
Victim files opposition to promotion of military torturers
MIGRANTS
Actress Jodi Sta. Maria joins Migrante in demanding justice for OFW killed in Mongolia
Migrante sounds alarm against illegal deportation of OFW trade union leader from South Korea
Migrants, refugees in Europe forge an alliance
LABOR
Violations of workers’ rights, getting worse – rights group
Radio network employees gear for strike against union-busting
Workers call labor department’s order against contractualization ‘a hoax’
NEWS IN PICTURES


Actress Jodi Sta. Maria joins Migrante in demanding justice for OFW killed in Mongolia (Photo courtesy of Migrante International / Bulatlat.com)

REGIONS
Environmentalists hail Baguio City’s ‘ban’ on SM tree-cutting
Governor hits open pit mining in Bontoc
Mining confab declares: “Philippines is not for sale”
INTERNATIONAL
The End of the End of Austerity We’re All Greeks Now
Globalism’s Perverse Rewards: World’s Apex Bully Leads World Into Lawlessness
European People Have Rejected Austerity Madness: Will the U.S. Get the Message
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Advocacy group for indigenous peoples pushes agenda for education
Cordillera Day 2012 focuses on mining and militarization
Killed indigenous leader Jimmy Liguyon’s family continue fight for justice
MULTIMEDIA


Video: Workers slam Aquino’s empty speech on Labor Day

Slideshow: Women slam Aquino’s inaction on price hikes


Slideshow: Workers call on Aquino to implement pro-people policies

ON THE FRINGES
The miracle of breast milk
For Dana Marie
CULTURE
GLOC-9: Nang magkatinig ang pipi
Performing Alan Jazmines: a reflection on his prison poem
Professor urges teaching of Ibaloi language
FULL COVERAGE
Wages and Labor Issues
Price Increases
GPH-NDFP Peace Talks
2010 Yearender
Morong 43
Aquino's First 100 Days
Hacienda Luisita
Ampatuan Massacre
Home         Subscribe (RSS or Email)        About Us        Donate         Contact Us         Archive         Advertise with Bulatlat
Copyright © 2009 Alipato Media Center Inc.         Read Bulatlat's Syndication Policy         Web design and hosting by Web Host Philippines