This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com).
Vol. VI, No. 30, Sept.
3-9, 2006
STREETWISE*
Melo Commission – No Surprises
The Melo Commission, in marked contrast to the Palace hype, is widely perceived to be neither powerful, credible nor independent.
By Carol
Pagaduan-Araullo
BusinessWorld
Posted by Bulatlat
Malacañang's creation of a supposedly "independent commission to address media
and activist killings" headed by former Supreme Court Justice Jose Melo, has
been met with much skepticism, if not incredulity, by the very victims
themselves, i.e. the families of those summarily executed, as well as their
advocates in the local and international human rights community, the churches,
the academe, the mass media and even Congress itself. The Melo Commission, in
marked contrast to the Palace hype, is widely perceived to be neither powerful,
credible nor independent.
We must be clear on what the victims and the public expect from a truly
independent commission. It is nothing less than to determine whether government
personnel under the Arroyo administration, such as the AFP and PNP, have any
role as either perpetrators, conspirators, accomplices or accessories to the
most serious human rights violations of killings, abduction, torture and
massacre reported by human rights groups and the victims or their organizations.
Moreover the public demands that such a commission flush out the perpetrators of
these extrajudicial killings, lay the ground for their successful prosecution
and punishment and thereby dispel the climate of impunity that has so far
enveloped these cases. It is not, as AO 157 states, that the Melo Commission "be
the Government's sole voice on the issue of media and activist killings" as if
the Arroyo administration merely wants to orchestrate its official line on the
matter.
Neither is it to merely
"make a report to the President outlining its action and policy recommendations
including appropriate prosecution and legislative proposals, if any, aimed at
eradicating the root causes of extrajudicial killings and breaking such cycle of
violence once and for all".
Such a description of the Melo Commission's function presupposes that there is
no basis whatsoever to the charge that the political killings are systematic,
officially-condoned if not directed, and subsequently officially covered-up by
means of public pronouncements by high-ranking civilian and military officials
discounting any military or police involvement without the benefit of any
serious investigation.
Is the Melo Commission starting from the premise that the killings cannot be
part of state policy in the light of the Arroyo regime's belligerent declaration
of "all-out war against the Left"? Ergo that culpability is limited to at most
certain abusive military and police personnel and that it cannot go all the way
up to the AFP and PNP top brass, the members of the Cabinet Cluster on Internal
Security and even up to the President and Commander-in-Chief herself?
It will then have to close its eyes to direct and circumstantial evidence
indicating a pattern to the killings: the victims' activist or leftist profile
and a favored modus operandi of using motorcycle-riding assassins after a period
of surveillance and even outright harassment by men believed to be members or
assets of the AFP and/or PNP. It will have to disregard evidence prior to and
after the murders pointing to state forces as having the motive, the means and
the opportunity to carry out these dastardly crimes. To top it all, it must
refuse to take notice of the authorities' zero track record in terms of credible
investigation, successful prosecution and punishment of the guilty parties.
If the Melo Commission cannot investigate these glaring facts and circumstances,
how can it get to the bottom of the killings? Perhaps, its fundamental flaw as
a so-called independent commission is precisely its being a creation of
Malacañang, its members hand-picked by Mrs. Arroyo herself without benefit of
any consultation at all with aggrieved parties.
How can the Melo Commission, like the proverbial water, rise above its source?
But what of the sweeping powers given by Malacañang to the Melo Commission?
Essentially, these are nothing more than the limited powers that the toothless
Human Rights Commission (CHR) does not already have. For example, while the
Melo Commission may have the power to subpoena, it has none to punish those who
choose to ignore its summons.
If today the Senate, with its much broader powers under the constitution, cannot
compel even middle level officials of the executive department to testify, how
much more the puny Melo Commission? Mr. Melo admits as much and is left to
citing the persuasive powers of Malacañang to get cooperation from the necessary
government agencies and officials. Just how far that will get the Commission in
its mission to flush out killers and their sponsors, including possible generals
and national security advisers, is anybody's guess.
At the end of the day, on what agencies will the Melo Commission rely to gather
evidence and to give protection to witnesses if not the very same ones that have
proven themselves incapable and unwilling to investigate and stop the killers
and even engaging in the foulest of cover-ups. Need we point out that the
creation of the Melo Commission is a tacit admission that Task Force Usig is an
abject failure if not a sham.
What of the Melo Commission's vaunted independence? It must be said that the
current composition leaves much to be desired. Toothless though the CHR, it has
at least displayed a modicum of independence having been the first government
body to condemn the killings and call the executive department to account. What
is there in the track record of GMA's hand-picked members of the Commission to
assure the victims of their independence?
The presence of DOJ Chief State Prosecutor Zuno and NBI Director Mantaring
virtually undermines not just the perception of independence but the
commission's real autonomy as an investigating body.
A little known fact is that the DOJ is one of the lead agencies in the Inter
Agency Legal Action Group (IALAG) created by Malacañang in January this year.
IALAG is tasked with carrying out the government's intensified legal offensives
against communist rebels which is the other face of the two-pronged "total war"
effort of the GMA regime. Justice Secretary Gonzales had been crowing that its
first achievement is the filing of rebellion charges against the Batasan 6 and
scores of other legal and underground Left personalities.
As such, the DOJ and NBI members of the Melo Commission are being given the
impossible task of investigating killings clearly associated if not resulting
from government's counter-insurgency campaign against the CPP and NPA. It is
unimaginable that the two subalterns of Justice Secretary Gonzales will be able
to maintain such a split personality within the commission and pursue the
investigation of those mandated to prosecute the military aspect of Mrs.
Arroyo's "total war".
The rest of the members of the Melo Commission are seen to be too close to Mrs.
Arroyo for comfort, much less to demonstrate unquestionable independence. Why
didn't GMA choose individuals known for their independence, probity and
respected record of fighting for human rights?
At this point, the answer is not hard to come by. Business World / Posted by
Bulatlat
You may email feedback at
carol_araullo@yahoo.com.
*Published in Business World
© 2006 Bulatlat ■ Alipato Media Center
Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.