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 27, 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: Sunrise at Sunset
SALUNGGUHIT Salungguhit: The face of poverty and struggle
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Photo of the week: Weight-lifting
TOP STORIES
GPH set to terminate peace talks with NDFP next year – NDFP’s Agcaoili
Dismissed union leaders ask RMN to be true to its branding
Suspect in abduction of Jonas Burgos shows no proof of alibi
OPINION
People’s lawyering goes a long way back in history
Intensive care
Crowning revelation
MUST-READS
KMP warns vs loopholes in SC decision on Luisita distribution
Anti-mining campaign gaining ground in Ilocos
Five years of searching for Jonas Burgos
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


Benjie Oliveros | The Impunity Must End

Published on December 20, 2009

By BENJIE OLIVEROS
Analysis
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — Impunity is what caused the Ampatuan massacre and it is also this impunity that has once again been demonstrated when President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo took an obdurate stance in defending the declaration of martial law in Maguindanao. “We make no apologies for acting where others fear to tread,” she said. But seeing the people of Maguindanao evacuating when martial law was declared makes one wonder who they fear more, the Ampatuans or the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). If martial law was declared to achieve stability, pursue justice for the victims, and protect the witnesses, why then were the people evacuating?

Arroyo added that “inaction would have led to dire consequences” and that she had made a tough choice. But the “dire consequences” of her choice had already happened in the Ampatuan massacre. It was her choice to allow the Ampatuans to accumulate so much wealth, power, and arms — a lot of which came from the AFP — that was why the November 23 massacre happened. The Ampatuans operated with impunity, which emboldened them to commit a hideous crime in broad daylight, near checkpoints, and with the help of the police.

Martial law, she said, allowed her government to quell a “rebellion.” It is not rebels, however, that the people of Maguindanao fears. It is one of the closest allies of the Arroyo administration who makes the people cringe. It is also not rebellion that made Quezon City Judge Luisito Cortez refuse to preside over a case that happened thousands of kilometers away. Surely a rebellion of Ampatuan’s private army would not spread all the way to the National Capital Region, especially if it had already been quelled by the AFP.

For a judge who has been handling criminal cases in the past to fear a family whose members are either in jail or heavily guarded by soldiers must mean something. Otherwise why would he run away from a case that, by his own admission, would have furthered his career. Instead he risked ending his career and, at the minimum, get stuck at where he is right now till he retires, because he fears not only the Ampatuans who are in jail or their private army, which had supposedly been subdued, but the power and impunity they enjoy. Perhaps he also fears the pressure that comes with handling a high-profile case such as this where, on the one hand, the demand for justice by the Filipino people is strong, and, on the other, the accused is a close ally or more aptly a “friend” of the Arroyo government.

It is also the climate of impunity that enables Gilbert Teodoro, former Defense secretary and Arroyo’s anointed presidential candidate, to say, with a straight face, that in order to prevent another Ampatuan massacre from happening, the solution is not to dismantle private armies but to beef up the AFP and the Philippine National Police. The AFP is already 300,00-strong while the number of fighters of the New People’s Army and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front combined is, by the government’s own account, barely one tenth of that. Is it not true that half of the forces of the Philippine Army is already deployed in Mindanao? Is it not true that it is the AFP that recruits, trains, and arms civilian volunteer organizations such as the one being used by the Ampatuans? Increasing police presence? Is it also not true that police officials were manning the checkpoint where the convoy of the victims was waylaid? Was there not enough police officials participating in the massacre?

This impunity must end. And this impunity would not end for as long as Arroyo wields power whether as president, congresswoman, or prime minister. Impunity would also persist if Arroyo’s clone cum anointed one, Gilbert Teodoro, emerges the winner in the presidential elections by some stroke of luck, especially of the Garci kind. (Bulatlat.com)

RELATED CONTENT

Welcome to Bulatlat's group blog

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.)

One Response to “Benjie Oliveros | The Impunity Must End”

  1. The Impunity Must End : The Philippine Reporter Says:

    [...] pursue justice for the victims, and protect the witnesses, why then were the people evacuating? (Read story…) Filed Under News, [...]

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
Family questions circumstances surrounding death of OFW in Singapore
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
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


Filipinos join protests against NATO in Chicago, US (Photo by Brett Jelinek / 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
Iggy Rodriguez, the artist as a conscious political being
GLOC-9: Nang magkatinig ang pipi
Performing Alan Jazmines: a reflection on his prison poem
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