Tag Archives: Laban ng Masa

[Statement] Laban ng Masa Says Implementing Rules and Regulations Make Anti-Terrorism Law Harsher

#HumanRights #ScrapTerrorLaw Laban ng Masa Says Implementing Rules and Regulations Make Anti-Terrorism Law Harsher

File Photo from LNM FB

The recently released Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR) of the Anti-Terrorism Law (ATL) do nothing to assuage the fear of Filipinos that the law poses a grave threat to their fundamental rights.

Laban ng Masa has come to this conclusion guided by detailed analysis of the IRR by Professor Antonio Laviňa, former Dean of the Ateneo de Manila University School of Government, and his colleague Joy Reyes.

Warrantless Arrest: No Improvement

For many, the most objectionable feature of the ATL is its provision on warrantless arrest. This is not remedied by the IRR. Article 125 of the Revised Penal Code provides that a person detained shall be delivered to the proper judicial authorities within 12 hours for crimes or offenses punishable by light penalties, 18 hours for crimes or offenses punishable by correctional penalties, and 36 hours for crimes or offenses punishable by afflictive or capital penalties. However, the IRR of ATL states that the law enforcement agent or military personnel shall not necessarily deliver but simply notify in writing the judge of the trial court nearest to the place of apprehension or arrest, within 48 hours.

Moreover, as in the ATL, the IRR provides that delivery of the suspected person to the proper judicial authority shall take place within 14 days, extendible by 10 more days if it is established that (a) further detention of the person/s is necessary to preserve the evidence related to “terrorism” or complete the investigation, (b) further detention of the person is necessary to prevent the commission of another act of “terrorism”, and (c) the investigation is being conducted “properly and without delay.” This detention that can last for up to 24 days, therefore, means that the IRR provision on warrantless arrest is grossly inconsistent with and is an unwarranted departure from that of the Revised Penal Code.

Designation, Listing, and Delisting: Worse

“Probable cause” is the standard by which the ATL can designate terrorists, and it is defined under the IRR as “a reasonable ground of suspicion supported by circumstances warranting a cautious person to believe that the proposed designee meets the requirements of designation.” The IRR simply repeats the overly broad definition of probable cause of the ATL and carries with it the same great potential for abuse.

The IRR, indeed, heighten the repressive potential of the ATL for according to Rule 6.5, a list of persons or entities designated as “terrorists,” will be published in or posted on the online official gazette and the official website of the ATL. This will include the name of the designated person or entity or other identifier information, a brief description of the case for designation, and the date of designation or date of last review of designation. This rule is not present in the ATL. Publicizing the names of individuals or groups arbitrarily designated as “terrorist” amplifies the fears that were first expressed by citizens’ groups during the passage of the ATL. It will bring harm to the reputations of the designated individuals and groups, carry negative political and economic consequences for them, and expose them to physical harm.

Moreover, when it comes to delisting, the concern articulated by civil society during the passage of the law remains the same: the burden of proof is placed on the suspect, and not on the prosecution, which should be the case when it comes to criminal cases.

Freezing of Assets and Travel Restrictions: No Mitigation

The IRR does nothing to mitigate the harshness of the process of freezing assets of suspected “terrorists” in the ATL. According to Rule 8.3, a preventive freeze order may be issued by the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) upon persons or entities on whom a preliminary order of proscription is issued or among those who are designated, and shall take effect immediately and shall remain in effect for a period of up to twenty days. This period, moreover, may be extended for a total of six months. This poses the threat of prolonged disruption or dislocation of the livelihoods and businesses of those accused.

Cancellation of the hold departure order or termination of other unreasonable and onerous restrictions on the rights to travel and freely communicate of the accused will take place only upon his or her acquittal or dismissal of the case. Given the fact that the government has great leeway in determining when and how long to prosecute a case, this provision allows for an open-ended restriction—and violation—of the individual’s freedom of movement and right to communicate with society.

Repeal of ATL is the only Solution

In sum, the IRR do nothing to safeguard the rights of citizens from being eroded by the Anti-Terrorism Law. In some respects, they make these rights more vulnerable to abuse:

  1. The IRR retains the ATL’s objectionable provisions on the warrantless arrest.
  2. They add a public designation process that threatens reputational harm, carries negative political and economic consequences, exposes the accused to physical harm, and puts the burden of proof for delisting on the accused instead of the state.
  3. They maintain the harsh provisions on freezing assets and the onerous, unjustified restrictions on the individual’s freedom to travel and freely communicate with loved ones, friends, and colleagues.

Even without recourse to the Anti-Terrorism Law, dangerous people like Gen. Antonio Parlade, Armed Forces of the Philippines Southern Luzon Command chief, have already arbitrarily and indiscriminately tagged individuals and organizations such as actresses Liza Soberano and Angel Locsin as “terrorists,” while admitting their lack of evidence in doing so. Armed with the Anti-Terrorism Law, fascist-minded officials like Parlade, we can be sure, will be able to move from threat to actual repression based on the flimsiest or fabricated evidence, with few or no legal barriers to contain them.

The IRR-fortified Anti-Terrorism Law is another perilous step in the weaponization of the law under the Duterte administration.
But more than this, it puts in jeopardy and tramples the democratic rights won over centuries of struggle of Filipino working-class people. While we understand that democratic rights won through decades of struggle by working people can never be guaranteed and are always conditional under elite rule, and that there has been an ongoing erosion of these rights under previous regimes, this is a significant escalation of these attacks on our hard-won rights, presenting an alarming and dangerous situation for democratic forces. It also highlights the enormous coercive power of the capitalist state, and the unwavering resolve of the ruling class to use state violence to protect its interests and stop the inexorable forward movement of our people towards a society of equality and justice.
We in Laban ng Masa affirm that the only way to protect citizens from the dangerous threat posed by the Anti-Terrorism Law is not through Implementing Rules and Regulations that “soften” them but through repeal of the law itself.

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[Statement] DUTERTE, RESIGN NOW! The Philippines Needs a Government of National and Popular Unity -LNM

File Photo from LNM FB

DUTERTE, RESIGN NOW! The Philippines Needs a Government of National and Popular Unity

(Statement of Laban ng Masa, on the 48th Anniversary of the Declaration of Martial Law, Sept. 21, 2020)

Laban ng Masa, a coalition of socialist organizations and individuals, joins the rest of the country in marking the 48th anniversary of the beginning of a dark period in our history. With everyone, we say, “Never again.”

Today, the threat of dictatorship again looms large.

The eyes of many of our compatriots, however, have now been opened to the dark intentions of the Duterte regime. Instrumental in making our people understand this has been the glaring contrast between the gross incompetence the administration has displayed in protecting the country from Covid 19 and the swift and drastic moves it has made to institute the so-called Anti-Terrorism Act, destroy ABS-CBN, and convict dissenting journalists. Containing Covid 19 is not Duterte’s priority. His priority is monopolizing political power.

He will not succeed because our people stand in the way.

At this time of national crisis, the Filipino people need fresh leadership since Duterte has already abdicated his responsibility to provide this and is now simply looking out for himself.

LnM joins the national chorus that is demanding Duterte’s departure so our people can form, not another corrupt, elite-dominated regime, but a government of national and popular unity to provide effective government as we undergo one of the deepest crises in our history.

Laban ng Masa says, Duterte resign!

Now!

Read at press conference of coalition of anti-dictatorship organizations on Sept 18, 2020, by Raquel Castillo, LnM National Coordinator
Tel. 0998 869 7209

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[Statement] NO ONE IS AN ISLAND Harnessing our People’s Energies to Meet the Threat of COVID-19 -LNM

Statement of Laban ng Masa, March 17, 2020

Our country faces today a great challenge – the COVID-19 pandemic that afflicts more than 150 countries. Our public health personnel have been grappling 24/7 with containing COVID-19 since late January. They have rushed hospital facilities, undertaken contact tracing, conducted testing, and dispersed frontline fighters to educate people on measures to protect themselves. Despite their best efforts, cases of COVID-19 infection have risen to 187, with the death toll at 12.

In contrast to our public health personnel, our political authorities seem to fail in the tasks they are supposed to be doing in support of frontline efforts. They have issued decrees with few guidelines for implementation, creating confusion among LGUs and chaos in our communities. In the latest step to stem the advance of the virus, the government has pushed for an “enhanced community quarantine” of the whole of Luzon Island.

While containment is necessary to combat the spread of disease, our political leaders have approached it as a military operation, forcing people’s compliance with threats of arrest. The new order which imposes more stringent measures is blind to the grave consequences for the vulnerable and marginalized. Those who do not have the support system to tide them over this period will carry most of the social cost of these top-down measures.

While COVID-19 does not discriminate and can infect anybody, the risks for disease are not evenly distributed in our society. Who survives the epidemic is greatly determined by who has more in life – to afford care, to drive to the nearest hospital, to stave off hunger, to counter the cruel measures that deny survival options of marginalized people. The epidemic thus exposes and deepens the inequalities in Philippine society.

Any public health emergency decision must take into account the differential impacts of measures on various sectors of society.

With this in mind, we in Laban ng Masa feel the following principles should guide the national strategy to deal with COVID-19.

1/ Public health personnel should direct the effort at all levels, with politicians, police, and the military in a subordinate role.

2/ While a strong central direction of the strategy is important, it must not be conducted as a top-down police or military operation, but instill persuasion and education as the key approaches to getting community support for massive but necessary disruptions of their lives.

3/ Civil society organizations (CSO’s), labor unions, religious organizations, and other citizens’ organizations must participate as vital social actors.

4/ We must draw from the best practices of societies that have dealt most effectively so far with the virus, like Vietnam, Macao, South Korea and Singapore.

5/ Transparency and respect for freedom of expression, and the truth, are essential if we are to avoid the terrible disasters unfolding in some countries, like the United States.

6/ Government and the private sector must provide financial and other support mechanisms to working people whose jobs and livelihoods are disrupted by the containment measures. In this regard, Laban ng Masa supports the following urgent measures:

a) Congress should immediately pass supplemental measures or amendments tripling the health budget, with money taken from already allocated funds for national defense, other security-related funds, disaster funds, and presidential discretionary funds.

b) Congress should immediately pass supplemental measures or amendments tripling the budget for DOLE and DSWD, also with money taken from already allocated security, disaster, and presidential funds, with provisions specifying the use of these funds for making up for lost income of lower income families during the emergency.

c) All officials from the level of assistant secretary and above in government departments and their counterparts in specialized government bodies, in Congress, and in the judiciary must donate one months’ worth of their salaries to make up for the loss of income of low income families.

d) Private companies must be encouraged to set up funds to support workers and their families during the emergency, with such funds taken from company profits as well as voluntary cuts in the salaries of upper management. Moreover, companies must not use the crisis as an excuse to cut their work forces or roll back labor rights.

COVID -19 has brought to light the fragile health conditions of the majority of our people, owing to poverty, inequality, and sheer lack of concern of the wealthy minority. If there is one thing the pandemic teaches us, it is that one’s life is bound up with the conditions of existence of others, and the worse off these are, the greater the boomerang on those enjoying a better life when a threat like COVID-19 comes along. No one is an island. Capitalism, which places competition above cooperation is the root of our country’s spectacular failure to deal with the current crisis.

A healthy society made possible by greater equality and compassion for one another is one of our best protections against the threat posed by pandemics. Hopefully, the need to establish our society on the pillars of equality and shared prosperity, instead of massive inequality, will be one of the lessons we will internalize from this crisis.

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