State
Terrorism is now a fact of life in our country. Since Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo assumed power in 2001, no less than 224 Filipino advocates
journalists, and activists have been assassinated by motorcycle-riding death
squads in various parts of the country. The pattern of the killings is
starkly clear: critics of the government who are lawyers, journalists,
priests and ministers, labor leaders, peasant organizers, teachers and
student leaders are being liquidated by professional hitmen. All the victims
are legal opposition personalities who have been branded or tagged as
"leftists" or members of what certain government, the military and police
officials call "legal fronts of the CPP/NPA".
The pattern
of killings is remarkably similar to "Operation Phoenix", launched by the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in South Vietnam in the late 60s. Lists
of suspected Communists or Communist sympathizers were given by the CIA to
professional hit men, thugs and even criminals serving sentences who were
released to do the dirty jobs for the military and police. As many as
40,000 suspected members or sympathizers of the South Vietnam National
Liberation Front (SV-NLF) were abducted and assassinated in an attempt to
physically wipe out the "political infrastructure" of the Vietnamese
"insurgency".
Similar patterns of
counter-insurgency and "anti-terror" tactics were also replicated in Latin
America in the 60s and 70s by the CIA. The murderous rampage in Vietnam by
the CIA and its local puppets was one of the most violent episodes of the
Vietnam War. But it failed to accomplish its objectives. In 1975, the
Vietnamese people finally defeated the U.S. military aggressors and their
South Vietnamese puppets and finally liberated South Vietnam to establish
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
Given the
closer covert and overt coordination and cooperation of the U.S. special
operations forces and Philippine military and police agencies in the
"anti-terror" campaign as never seen before, it is impossible for them not
to have a hand in this. The manner and pattern of killings today are even
worse than the vigilante killings in the country that occurred in the late
80s against members and leaders of people's organizations and NGOs. They
are meant to silence legal critics and the open opposition to the creeping
dictatorship and the "Cha-Cha "locomotive train". The killings are a threat
to the very existence of democracy which should guarantee freedom of speech,
assembly and the right to freely organize for grievances and social change.
Political killings of legal personalities will not only permanently sabotage
the peace process, but will further fuel the armed insurgency as the legal
option diminishes.
Advocates and
social reformers are now an endangered species in this country. If the
government is not really a party to this state of terror as it claims, then
it should put a stop to these killings and assassinations of its citizens.
The government must enforce law and order and provide protection to all its
citizens, including its staunchest critics and those in the opposition.
Government has no right to exist if it is inutile in carrying out the most
basic duties of a state.
The University
faculty must close ranks with other sectors of society in ensuring that that
we have an government that can provide protection to all
its citizens, and not one that threatens their lives or their very
existence.