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May 27, 2012
Manila, Philippines
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Alex Montes: A Doctor to the People, Hurt and Broken

Published on February 16, 2010

Dr. Alex Montes is a retired surgeon. But even in retirement, he found time to serve the poor through the medical missions he organized and joined and through the trainings he conducted for community health workers and volunteers. Today, he is behind bars — abused, tortured and humiliated by a regime that is terrified by his passion.

By MARYA SALAMAT
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — Dr. Alex Montes, 62, is a retired surgeon but still an active medical practitioner who regularly joined medical missions and conducted trainings for health workers and volunteers.

It’s a vocation that springs not just from a lifelong passion for medicine but also from faith. “It was always in connection with his religious affiliation with the UCCP,” his niece, law student Carla Montes Rocas, 24, told Bulatlat, referring to the United Church of Christ in the Philippines, one of the Protestant religious denominations in the country.

“He’s a quiet person,” said Carla. As a religious family affiliated with the UCCP, Carla said they believe that God is not only found inside the Church but also among the people.

Dr. Montes took up his primary, secondary and pre-med schooling at the Silliman University in Dumaguete City. He became a surgeon at the UERM in Manila where he based himself since. He practiced medicine at different hospitals such as Bethany Hospital and Capitol Medical Center, “all of which are clearly legitimate hospitals,” Carla said.


Dr. Alex Montes, handcuffed to a soldier, at the Court of Appeals (Photo by Janess Ann J. Ellao / bulatlat.com)

Although mainly practicing in private, Dr. Montes had often joined community-based health services, conducted seminars on health trainings, helped the “Doctor to the Barrios” program.

At times, Dr. Montes brought along some of his grown children to medical missions in needy communities where they treat sick residents and give out medicines. Some of his children are also doctors. Their side of the Montes family, said Carla, is composed mainly of doctors; Carla’s family is composed mostly of lawyers.

“Uncle Alex has been doing what he’s doing for years. After every medical mission, he’d go back home immediately,” Carla said.

So it came as a shock to her and to her family that Dr. Montes is being accused by the military of being a communist guerrilla.

He is one of the 43 health workers arrested by the military on Feb. 6 and accused of holding a bomb-making training in Morong, Rizal. From being a bomb expert with the New People’s Army’s, Dr. Montes and the other 42 health workers being detained at Camp Capinpin are now accused of being members ofthe NPA’s “health bureau,” a claim that many, least of all Dr. Montes’ friends and colleagues, find absurd.

Testimony

Dr. Montes was the lone witness, his statements the lone testimony that the lawyers for the 43 health workers sought to hear before the Court of Appeals yesterday, during a hearing on the habeas corpus petition they filed to compel the military to produce the 43. The armed forces initially ignored the Supreme Court’s earlier ruling ordering them to present the health workers, prompting critics to accuse it of arrogance.

“He gave a substantial testimony,” said Atty. Romeo Capulong, the lead counsel for the detainees, of Dr. Montes. “He recounted their ordeal from the time their health training was raided on the morning of Feb. 6 up to their condition in detention at present.”

During the hearing, the counsel for the military repeatedly tried to block Dr. Montes’s testimony from being heard, citing the inappropriateness of the CA as the venue for such, and another time citing their supposed fear of how the media will report his testimony. But in the end, Dr. Montes took the stand and told his story.

He spoke of their fright upon seeing the armed soldiers barging into the farmhouse of Dr. Melecia Velmonte, where they were conducting the health training. He spoke of the commotion that ensued, of the failure by the raiding team to tell them why they were being taken into custody.

Dr. Montes spoke of the handcuffs slapped on his wrists and the dreadful one-hour trip to what turned out later to be Camp Capinpin, in Tanay, Rizal, a military camp where the 2nd Infantry Divison of the army is based.

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7 Responses to “Alex Montes: A Doctor to the People, Hurt and Broken”

  1. Just Act » Blog Archive » Philippines arrest of a former church official Says:

    [...] More [...]

  2. Prof. Roger Galvan Says:

    I condemn the arrest and the violations done by the military. It simply shows how the GMA administration grossly and shamely neglects Human Rights and the Constitution. The culprits should be puished. Let the rule of law be observed if we are really living in a democratic society.

  3. Lito Medina Says:

    What exactly "health training" is he conducting? He must have been under surveillance for a while. Govt claimed that they confiscated NTG on site is that true? There must be a court approved search warrant presented. Even his family are all memebrs of Roman Cahtolic saints, or belong to the corrupt Arroyos all is fair in the eyes of the law. Police use hancuff to mere diving w/o license here in the US.

  4. manuel c datu Says:

    its paranoid of military official to arrest the 43 volunteer health workers mabigyang kasiyahan lamang si gma sa deadline ng oplan bantay laya 11 maawa kayo sa mga mahihirap na hindi man lamang makatikim ng serbisyo medical dahil na rin sa inyong kakulangan kung walang non profit organization ay lalong wala ang sambayanan.long live the doctors and health workers without borders.

  5. ROQUE Says:

    Free Dr. Alex Montes immediately!

  6. MORONG 43: A Doctor to the People, Hurt and Broken : The Philippine Reporter Says:

    [...] (Read story…) Filed Under News, Philippines  [...]

  7. Allyn Montes Says:

    To Lito Medina
    - First Responder’s Training in line of the recent typhoons that hit the Philippines (one of which was Ondoy).
    - Yeah, according to the “intelligence” of the military, Dr. Alexis Montes was seen talking to a high-ranking official of the NPA in Luneta (Manila), where in fact, he was in Cebu working in VCMC.
    - What’s NTG?
    -The search warrant is for a one person named Mario Condes, who is not known to the owners of the farm and even the local residents in Morong, Rizal.
    -If you are a Filipino or you know the Philippines, you should know that that is not what is happening here in the Philippines especially in the Arroyo Regime.
    - Really? People caught driving without a license are handcuffed for 3 days using a plastic cable tie? Denied access to their lawyers, family and the Commission of Human Rights? Tsk.
    I am not an activist, I am just a daughter of the wrongfully accused.

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