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Filipino Protestant prelate leads anti-martial law protest

Military rule in Mindanao has resulted in ‘state fascism and tyranny, says Bishop Antonio Ablon

[UCAN] A Protestant bishop led about 500 tribal people, farmers, and human rights activists from the southern Philippines in a protest march to the military headquarters in Manila on Dec. 4.

Bishop Antonio Ablon of the Philippine Independent Church said they were protesting against the “continuing repression of people’s rights in Mindanao.”

The prelate from Pagadian City Diocese in Zamboanga del Sur province said they were also calling for the termination of martial law in Mindanao because it has resulted in “state fascism and tyranny.”

President Rodrigo Duterte declared martial law across Mindanao on May 23 last year after so-called Islamic State gunmen seized the city of Marawi.

The resulting five-month conflict resulted in the displacement of around half a million people, about 70,000 of whom remain in temporary shelters.

The Philippine Congress has twice extended martial law in the region, which remains in effect until Dec. 31.

“The future of [the people of Mindanao] is dark and murderous under Duterte’s martial law,” said the prelate.

The bishop claimed that since martial law was implemented more than a year ago, there has been 154 “extrajudicial killings,” 700 individuals have faced “false criminal charges,” and at least 50 tribal schools have been closed by the military.

On Dec. 3, the Commission on Human Rights announced that it had found two military officials responsible for human rights abuses in connection with the killing of seven tribal people in December last year.

Erlan Deluvio, regional director of the commission, said Lt. Col. Harold Cabunoc of the army’s 33rd Infantry Battalion and Lt. Col. Benjamin Leander of 27th Infantry Battalion were “liable for human rights violations for their utter failure to exert earnest efforts in distinguishing combatants from non-combatants.”

In December last year, tribal leader Datu Victor Danyan and six other people were killed in what human rights groups described as a massacre.

The military officials, however, maintained that what happened was a “legitimate encounter” between soldiers and communist rebels that resulted in the deaths of the tribal people and two soldiers.

Bishop Ablon said with martial law continuing in Mindanao, the military and its militias “terrorize people in cities and in the countryside.”

“With yet another extension of martial law looming in Mindanao … we are united in fighting the fascist and dictatorial rule of Duterte,” said the Protestant prelate.

On Dec. 4, Philippine Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana announced he would support a recommendation from the military to extend martial law in Mindanao for another year. He said a recommendation letter had already been drafted. Lorenzana said there were proposals for “localized martial law” but he said that would not work because Mindanao is a contiguous area.

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