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On the killing of
Bayan Muna leader in Bicol:
‘They’re Trying to Stop Us’ – Satur
The deputy minority leader at the
lower House last week linked the recent killing of Rodolfo “Pong”
Alvarado – leader of Bayan Muna (BM or People First) – in Ligao
City, Albay to the government’s thrust to prevent the party-list
group from winning seats in this year’s elections. “If they can’t
have our party disqualified, they’ll do what they can to cripple it
to prevent it,” said Bayan Muna Rep. Satur Ocampo in an interview
with Bulatlat.
BY ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO
Browse in Bulatlat
The deputy minority leader at the
House of Representatives last week said linked the recent killing of
Rodolfo “Pong” Alvarado – leader of Bayan Muna (BM or People First)
– in Ligao City, Albay to the government’s thrust to prevent the
party-list group from winning seats in this year’s elections.
“If they can’t have our party
disqualified, they’ll do what they can to cripple it to prevent it,”
said Bayan Muna Rep. Satur Ocampo in an interview with Bulatlat.
Alvarado is the 122nd BM
member killed since 2001 by political assassins widely believed to
be government forces.
He was also the fourth activist
killed in Bicol in just three weeks. On Dec. 11, BM member Cris
Frivaldo was shot dead by gunmen in Irosin. He was the younger
brother of Irosin municipal councilor Max Frivaldo, also a BM
member, who was killed inside his house earlier this year.
On Dec. 12, human rights lawyer Gil
Gojol was shot dead by two motorcycle-riding gunmen after attending
a court hearing. His driver, Danilo France, also died in the attack.
Gojol, a former
Sorsogon provincial board member, was also a lawyer of Sotero
Llamas, a consultant of the National Democratic Front of the
Philippines (NDFP). Llamas himself was slain in May last year.
Then on Dec. 21,
Francisco Bantog, a BM provincial auditor in Donsol, Sorsogon, was
shot 20 times by three motorcycle-riding gunmen.
Sixth nominee
Alvarado, 53, a
Bicol regional coordinator and Albay provincial chairman of BM, was
also the party-list group’s sixth nominee. Aside from being a BM
leader, he was also a convener of the Bicol People Opposed to
Warrantless Electricity Rates Increases (Bicol POWER) and was part
of the secretariat of the Bicol Movement for Disaster Response (BMDR).
Reports reaching
Bulatlat said Alvarado was driving his car in front of his
house in Ligao at around 5:30 p.m. last Dec. 31 when fired upon by a
lone gunman. Alvarado sustained eight gunshot wounds and died
instantly, the reports further show.
Alvarado’s
killing occurred just 15 days after National Security Adviser
Norberto Gonzales gave a radio interview in which he sought the
Red-tagging of “leftist” candidates for the 2007 elections. In a
Dec. 16 interview with government-run dzRB, Gonzales asked that
“left-leaning” party-list candidates be “labeled” as “communists” to
warn the electorate – particularly soldiers and policemen, he said –
against allowing those he called “democracy’s enemies” to get
congressional seats.
“There will be
plenty who will run in the party-list in the coming elections and we
have to describe them all,” Gonzales said. “As National Security
Adviser, it is important (for me) to show soldiers and police what
groups are being used by the communists to continue their bad
intentions on the public.”
Gonzales did not
name in the radio interview which party-list groups “are being used
by the communists.”
Red “recruiter”
However, in a
forum at the Sulo Hotel in Quezon City in August last year – in
which Bulatlat was present – Gonzales particularly named BM
as a “recruiter” and “financier” of the clandestine New People’s
Army (NPA), which is led by the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP).
The CPP-NPA has been waging armed struggle against the government
for more than 30 years.
“There are two
frames of their (the communists’) struggle: armed and legal,”
Gonzales said in the forum at the Sulo Hotel. “Those in the legal
frame say they should not be included among those pursued by General
Palparan because they are in the legal arena. Let’s get into the
moral plane: you are the ones advocating armed struggle, you are the
ones strengthening armed struggle, you are the ones who give
resources to strengthen armed struggle – and you say you should not
be included.”
“That’s what
Satur Ocampo and the others say,” Gonzales continued. “What do you
mean you should not be included? You are the ones recruiting for the
NPA, you are the ones giving money to the NPA, you are the ones
making the rebellion grow – and you say you are innocent?”
The General
Palparan Gonzales was referring to is retired Maj. Gen. Jovito
Palparan Jr., who has earned notoriety for the countless shocking
cases of human rights violations in the areas under his command.
BM, which was
formed in 1999, has twice topped the elections for party-list
groups. It first ran for congressional seats in 2001 and was able to
send all its first three nominees – Ocampo, Crispin Beltran, and
Liza Maza – to the House of Representatives.
Beltran and Maza
later led their own party-list groups, Anakpawis (Toiling Masses)
and Gabriela Women’s Party (GWP), to victory in the 2004 elections.
BM is currently
represented in Congress by Ocampo, Teddy Casiño, and Joel Virador.
The party-list
group has been noted for its staunch advocacy of independence in
economic and foreign policy, social justice, good governance, and
human rights.
“That is a clear
signal to Bayan Muna members about what the government and the
military will be doing to derail us in our campaign and block our
possible victory in the coming polls,” Ocampo said on Alvarado’s
killing.
Ocampo also took
issue with Gonzales’ allegations on BM as a “recruiter” and
“financier” for the NPA, and on party-list groups which “are being
used by communists” supposedly to strengthen the armed struggle. He
noted that Gonzales – who is a leader of the Partido Demokratiko
Sosyalista ng Pilipinas (PDSP or Socialist Democratic Party of the
Philippines) – has been accusing BM of being a “communist front
organization” since 2001.
“We have
challenged Gonzales several times either to stop his black
propaganda against us or to present clear evidence for his
allegations,” Ocampo said. “But he has yet to present documentary
evidence on that.”
“The legal
organizations they are branding as ‘front organizations’ end up
becoming targets of physical elimination,” Ocampo further noted.
Based on data
from BM, four of its leaders and organizers were killed in 2003. The
number shot up to 16 the next year, which was an election year. The
next year, BM recorded 36 of its leaders and organizers ending up as
victims of political killings.
In an interview
with Bulatlat in 2005, BM deputy secretary-general Robert de
Castro said many of the killings of his group’s leaders and
organizers occurred in areas where it garnered high numbers of
votes. Ocampo made the same observation. Bulatlat |