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NPA UNDER FIRE FOR KILLINGS, ATTACKS ON CIVILIAN PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 14 October 2011 04:16

abs-cbnNEWS.com

Posted at 10/05/2011 9:02 PM | Updated as of 10/05/2011 9:02 PM

MANILA, Philippines - Communist rebels in the Philippines should stop unlawful killings, abductions, and attacks that target civilians, a New York-based human rights group said Wednesday.

The Communist Party of the Philippines' (CPP) armed wing, the New People's Army, has admitted killing civilians and detaining people in recent months, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW).

"For 4 decades the New People's Army has offered excuses for cold-blooded killings of civilians," Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Elaine Pearson said in a press statement. "Recent attacks show that there has been no real departure from this illegal practice."

Pearson said the NPA's Mount Alip Front Operations Command in Mindanao claimed responsibility for killing Ramelito Gonzaga in September 2 for "crimes against the people."

The rebel group also acknowledged a pregnant woman, Ana Marie Campo, was also injured in the incident.

The NPA has also owned up to the the August 19 killing of Raymundo Agaze in Kabankalan City, Negros Occidental. NPA leaders often seek to justify killings through death penalty ruling made by its so-called "people's courts," HRW said, adding that punishments are imposed for alleged criminal acts and for activities deemed anti-NPA, such as spying for the armed forces.

Philip Alston, the United Nations special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions from 2004 to 2010, reported that the NPA's court system "is either deeply flawed or simply a sham," according to HRW.

"Any claim that people who are tried by the NPA’s ‘people’s courts’ are receiving a fair hearing is ludicrous," Pearson said. "The NPA's 'revolutionary justice' is not just – it is simply old-fashioned murder."

Violation of international law

HRW said the NPA's detention of civilians violates international law.

The rebels are holding at least 13 people in Mindanao, such as Mayor Henry Dano of Lingig, Surigao del Sur province, and his 2 military escorts Cpl. Alrey Villasis Desamparado and Pfc. Allan Pelino.

"The NPA captured them on July 13 and claims they are intelligence operatives of the 75th Infantry Battalion-Intelligence Section and will face charges before the 'people's court,'" HRW said. The CPP on October 1 ordered Dano's release. The NPA also detained 4 Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) guards on July 21 – Murphy B. Todyog, Eric D. Llamasares, Rogelio E. Begontes, and Rolando D. Bajuyo Jr. – and claims to have granted them "prisoner of war" status, the human rights group said.

Six other civilians, who are traders from Misamis Occidental, are also accused by the group of being government spies.

A representative of the families told Human Rights Watch that the six were going house-to-house on August 19 on the border of Davao City and Bukidnon selling "kutson" or beds, when the NPA captured them, accusing them of trespassing.

Ka Ariel Inda Magbanwag, spokesperson for the NPA in Bukidnon-North Central Mindanao, has told journalists that the 6 are to be tried in the "people's court."

Gov't action needed

HRW urged the government to investigate the killings and unlawful detentions and to prosecute those responsible.

It added that the NPA should abide by international humanitarian law, including Common Article 3 to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and its Second Additional Protocol.

"International humanitarian law prohibits killing civilians, mistreating anyone in custody, and convicting anyone in proceedings that do not meet international fair trial standards," the group said.

The human rights group also said the NPA has long admitted to killing government officials; soldiers, police, and pro-government militia; civilians who are deemed to engage in acts "against the people;" and allegedly traitorous NPA or Communist Party members.

Since 1969, the NPA has been engaged in an armed rebellion with the goal of establishing a Maoist state in the Philippines.

The military estimates that the NPA has around 4,700 guerrillas, who are active in about 69 of the country's 81 provinces.

Last Updated on Friday, 14 October 2011 04:32
 
"You Can Trust the Communists (to be Communists)" PDF Print E-mail
Written by Dr. Fred C. Schwarz   
Thursday, 29 September 2011 03:10

Chapter 1 - Trust the Communists?

The thesis of this book is very simple. It is that Communists are Communists. I intend to show that they are exactly what they say they are; they believe what they say they believe; their objective is the objective they have repeatedly proclaimed to all the world; their organization is the organization they have described in minute detail; and their moral code is the one they have announced without shame. Once we accept the fact that Communists are Communists, and understand the laws of their thought and conduct, all the mystery disappears, and we are confronted with a movement which is frightening in its superb organization, strategic mobility and universal program, but which is perfectly understandable and almost mathematically predictable. In the battle against Communism, there is no substitute for accurate, specific knowledge. Ignorance is evil and paralytic. The best intentions allied with the most sincere motives are ineffective and futile if they are divorced from adequate knowledge. Consider a mother who has a small daughter to whom she is devoted. For this daughter she is determined to do all that a mother may do. She feeds her a well-balanced diet to build a healthy body; she provides the finest education to develop her mind; she cares for her spiritual well-being, and gives her a lovely home. In the environment of this young girl, there are men who specialize in gaining the confidence of little girls by giving them candy and enticing them into automobiles to molest them. If the mother neglects to give her child the specific information to meet such a situation, she will fail in her duty, and all her loving care will count for nothing when the crisis comes. There is no substitute for specific knowledge.

It is the purpose of this book to give that knowledge. Some of it is a little technical. Some of it may seem a long way from the everyday needs and activities of life. Nonetheless, the information contained in it is essential to survival. The statement is frequently heard: "You cannot trust the Communists!" This is incorrect; you can trust the Communists.

They are extremely trustworthy. You can trust a cancer cell to obey the laws of its lawless growth. You can trust an armed bank robber to take the money and try to escape. Similarly, you can trust the Communists to act in accordance with the laws of their being.

When people operate according to clearly defined principles, they are both trustworthy and predictable. While we continue to believe that the Communists think, feel and believe as we do, the Communist movement is, as Winston Churchill described it, "a riddle wrapped in an enigma." The movements of the heavenly bodies appeared mysterious and unpredictable till Copernicus discovered the governing laws. When we understand the philosophy of Communism, the unifying purpose concealed in their frequently chaotic and contradictory conduct is revealed. read more

 

CHAPTER 2 -  THE RECRUITING OF A COMMUNIST

CHAPTER 3 -  THE MOLDING OF A COMMUNIST

CHAPTER 4 -  THE COMMUNIST AT WORK

CHAPTER 5 -  TECKNIQUES FOR SEIZING - PHILOSOPHY OF VIOLENCE

CHAPTER 6 -  SUCCESSFUL TECKNIQUES FOR SEIZING POWER

CHAPTER 7 -  CONSOLIDATION OF POWER - THE DICTATORSHIP OF THE PROLETARIAT

CHAPTER 8 -  ALLIES OF COMMUNISM

CHAPTER 9 -  THE BRAINWASHING 

CHAPTER 10- THE DIFFUCULT, DEVIOUS AND DANGEROUS DIALECTRIC 

CHAPTER 11- PROGRAM FOR SURVIVAL


Last Updated on Tuesday, 04 October 2011 06:58
 
MANILYN...ANOTHER WASTED LIFE... PDF Print E-mail
Written by Agnes Lopez Reaño   
Thursday, 22 September 2011 07:04

A bullet ended everything for a poor family’s dream . . . She’s supposed to be working as a house helper with the intense desire of helping her family to survive, a poor farmer’s daughter from Brgy Magbok, Tulunan, North Cotabato whose only dream for her family is to own a land, be able to send her sibling to school and to be able to enjoy three meals a day.  This is a simple dream and an uncomplicated desire of an innocent and beautiful provincial lass who was caught in the web of deception and manipulation by the communist front organizations.

On that particular day that Manilyn left their abode, her parents knew all along that she was with a woman who will bring her to the city to become a house helper . . . hoping against hope that all will be well. Despite the meager salary that she would be receiving and the fact that she would be away from home, with a heavy heart her parents opted to temporarily send their daughter away.  Her parent’s only solace then is that she would be helping their family, that they would be able to subsist not only with a hand to mouth existence but with a little amount for the family’s other needs.  Dreaming that the day Manilyn left their house would be the start of something beneficial for them, it boost the family’s morale and flamed even more their desire to help and support one another.

With an ardent longing for their daughter the family came up with a resolve that the moment Manilyn would be able to send support to the family they would conserve and spend wisely her money.  Planning what to do with the support that Manilyn would send, they focus on the education of her sibling, to build a nice but simple nipa hut, to have enough capital for the agricultural needs of their small farm lot and other simple and austere needs of their family. But all the family’s dream came into naught. . . Manilyn was hoodwinked by a member of the New People’s Army.

And this started the misery and wretchedness of the family . . . the agony of losing a daughter, the pain of realizing that they would never see Manilyn again, the anguish that they could never achieved justice for the death of their dear daughter and the torment that she died not seeing the fruits of her labor.

Manilyn died in an encounter.  She was with the unit of the New People’s Army operating in Cotabato when a bullet ended her life. . .  her aspirations for her family. . . her dreams . . . everything that matters for a young woman.

What is very saddening is . . . now her family is left with nothing to remember their daughter. The NPA unit who recruited her where nowhere to be found to assist her parents to give her a decent burial.


Last Updated on Thursday, 29 September 2011 06:37
 
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