This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 40, November
13-19, 2005
A year after Hacienda Luisita
massacre When will
justice be served for the victims of the violent dispersal of the Hacienda
Luisita picket line? Until now, the government agencies that investigated the
incident have not yet identified those responsible for the wanton violation of
human rights. BY DABET
CASTAÑEDA Sixty-four year old Federico Laza’s voice
still breaks and his eyes become watery at the memory of his son, Jesus. A
sugarcane worker at the hacienda, 34-year old Jesus was one of the seven persons
killed in the picket line violence. That the massacre remains unresolved to this
day comes as no surprise, though, to the older Laza. “Kapag gobyerno nakapatay, talagang
malayo ang hustisya para sa mga dukhang katulad namin (If the government
kills someone, justice is far from reach for poor people like us),” he
said in an interview at the picket line where he has stayed and survived for
more than a year now. According to the preliminary report of the
Senate Committee on Labor, Employment and Human Resources Development (CLEHRD),
“there is a prevailing perception that the Philippine National Police (PNP) is
not really serious in identifying the culprits and in getting into the bottom of
the issue (of the Hacienda Luisita Massacre).” The investigation which saw four public
hearings was conducted by the committee chaired by Sen. Jinggoy Estrada. He
delivered a privilege speech on Nov. 17, 2004, a day after seven strikers were
felled by bullets and others injured in what could be the most violent picket
line dispersal in history. In his speech, the senator condemned the
“brutal and brazen display of ruthless violence by the PNP and the military” and
called on, among others, the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE), PNP and
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), to conduct an inquiry. Representatives of
the Central Azucarera de Tarlac (CAT), CAT Labor Union (CATLU), United Luisita
Workers’ Union (ULWU), and human rights and health organizations attended the
Senate investigation. Police and DoLE officials testified during
the inquiries that the primary objective of the police presence was to open
CAT’s Gate 1 which gives primary access to the cane trucks in going to the sugar
mill. DoLE Sec. Patricia Sto. Tomas said, “the
deputization of police personnel was to maintain peace and order and ensure
passage into the gates of Hacienda Luisita.” Sto. Tomas issued an Assumption of
Jurisdiction (AJ) order last Nov. 10, 2004 and ordered the mill workers to
return to work while ordering the CAT management to give a P15 ($0.28, based on
an exchange rate of P54.42 per US dollar) daily wage increase and P12,500
($229.69) signing bonus. The workers originally demanded a P150 ($2.76) daily
wage increase and P30,000 ($551.27) signing bonus which went down to P32 ($0.59)
and P15,000 ($275.63), respectively. By then, however, the collective bargaining
agreement (CBA) negotiation has reached a deadlock. Police tried to disperse the strikers last
Nov. 15, 2004 but failed. In the Senate inquiry, Police Chief Superintendent
Quirino dela Torre explained that on Nov. 16, he “sought help from the Nolcom
(Northern Luzon Command) because of its proximity to the sugar estate.” He also
said the strikers’ ranks already swelled to 5,000. Since then, Sto. Tomas has been under fire
for allegedly abusing her authority. Enrile inquired if there was a direct
Presidential authorization to send military troops. Pimentel, on the other hand,
insisted that under Article 7, Section 16 of the 1987 Constitution, it is only
the President who can deploy the military to quell lawless violence. The
legislator blamed Sto. Tomas for the violence that occurred in the picket line.
He urged her to resign “out of delicadeza” since she acted beyond her authority.
In the inquiry, union officials have also
implicated the Cojuangco family in the massacre. Sto. Tomas has unwittingly implicated the
powerful family with her own disclosure that she decided to send military troops
after she received a call from Rep. Noynoy Aquino (Tarlac, second ditrict)
informing her that “tension was mounting in Hacienda Luisita since 50 busloads
of sympathizers from neighboring provinces had arrived to beef up the picket
line.” The House representative is the son of former Pres. Corazon
Cojuangco-Aquino of the powerful Cojuangco clan in Tarlac who owns both the CAT
and the Hacienda Luisita, Inc. (HLI) sugar plantation. The report by CLEHRD Legislative Secretary
Gemma Genoveva Tanpiengco dated Dec. 1, 2004, stated that after the dispersal,
110 were illegally detained, 114 were injured and hospitalized, 32 were hit by
bullets, 39 sacadas (seasonal sugar workers) remained missing after their
arrest and 78 were victims of the looting by the police and military personnel.
However, in the report dated Feb. 3 this
year, Enrile and Estrada have said that the PNP is not keen in resolving the
issue at hand. In particular, Enrile probed on the police’s
non-recovery of the material evidence in the area that was under its complete
control. PNP Deputy General Reynaldo Velasco earlier testified in the same
public hearing that they were not able to recover the slugs, shells, and
cartridges of the weapons that would point to the ones who killed the strikers.
Velasco added that they were unable to
recover the slugs that would match the firearms that were subjected to ballistic
tests. During the investigation, Senior Supt.
Arturo Quilop of the PNP-Camp Crame Crime Laboratory (PNP-CCCL) presented their
initial findings. However, Quilop himself could not testify as to the accuracy
of the findings because he was only sent by his officials to attend the
hearings. Quilop said a separate technical group investigated the dispersal.
This prompted Enrile to remove Quilop as a
resource person of the inquiry and asked that the members of the technical group
that conducted the investigation to submit themselves to the Senate
investigation instead. Before the hearing adjourned, Estrada
requested the PNP to submit to the committee the 433-page PNP report on the
Hacienda Luisita incident. But Tanpiengco, in an interview with
Bulatlat, said it has not been submitted to this day. Because of this, the
inquiry has not resumed and Senate has not completed its investigation.
The House of Representatives (HoR) also
conducted its own investigation. In the preliminary report of the joint inquiry
of the House Committees on Human Rights, Labor and Employment and Agrarian
Reform, it concluded that human rights violations were committed against the
striking workers of Hacienda Luista by the elements of the PNP, AFP and the DoLE.
It recommended the review and, if warranted,
the repeal of provisions pertaining to the AJ in the Labor Code. This
recommendation is based on the findings of the Center for Trade Union and Human
Rights (CTUHR) that “various violent dispersal of striking workers that resulted
to hundreds of human rights violations are directly attributed to the AJ.” The House committees also recommended the
relief and filing of criminal and administrative charges against Supt. Angelo
Sunglao, provincial director of PNP-Tarlac, and Supt. dela Torre as well as
other officers and members of the military and police forces who violated
constitutionally-guaranteed rights of workers. The committees also recommended the filing
of appropriate charges against Sto. Tomas. However, Sunglao and dela Torre have been
relieved from their posts even before the House committees’ recommendation. Sto.
Tomas has retained her post. The Commission on Human Rights (CHR)
conducted its own investigation but has not come out with its results.
On Jan. 13 this year, 52 of the victims’
survivors filed criminal and administrative charges against the HLI and CAT
owners, PNP, AFP and DoLE officials. The criminal charges filed include multiple
murder for the death of Jhavie Basilio, 20; Juancho Sanchez, 20; Jessie Valdez,
30; Jaime Fastidio, 46; Jesus Laza, 34; June David, 28; and Adriano Caballero
Jr., 23; Multiple frustrated murder, multiple
attempted murder, serious and less serious physical injuries were also filed for
the wounding of at least 72 individuals, 27 of whom sustained gunshot wounds.
Those accused as responsible were also
charged with theft and malicious mischief for stealing mobile phones,
kitchenware and sacks of rice, among others. A check at the office of the Ombudsman in
Quezon City showed that it has ended its investigations and it is now up for
review by the chief ombudsman. Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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Justice Still Elusive
BulatlatThe perpetrators
Not keen on resolution
Other avenues
Case filed