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UPDATE (Philippines): Further details on plot to kill torture victims

May 8, 2006

UPDATE ON URGENT APPEAL UPDATE ON URGENT APPEAL UPDATE ON URGENT APPEAL

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Update on Urgent Appeal

9 May 2006

[RE: UA-082-2006: PHILIPPINES: Brutal torture of 11 persons and subsequent filing of fabricated charges against them; UP-063-2006: PHILIPPINES: Lawyers for 11 torture victims file motion to withdraw charges against them; UP-067-2006: PHILIPPINES: Torture victims file charges against policemen; UP-092-2006: PHILIPPINES: Plot to kill torture victims in jail; UP-099-2006: PHILIPPINES: Jail authorities failing to ensure adequate security despite grave danger torture victims are facing]
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UP-100-2006: PHILIPPINES: Further details on plot to kill torture victims

PHILIPPINES: Torture; illegal arrest and detention; denial of adequate medical and trauma treatment; security and protection concerns; detention of minors together with adult detainees; complete collapse of rule of law
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Dear friends,

Since issuing our appeal this morning detailing the grave danger two torture victims face while in detention (please see UP-099-2006), the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has now learned the name of the man believed to have been hired to kill the inmates at the La Trinidad Provincial Jail, Benguet.

According to the latest information, the inmate who was offered money, and was later found to have accepted the money, to kill Rundren Lao and Jefferson dela Rosa is William Pangan, currently detained in cell number 3 at the La Trinidad Provincial Jail. Pangan has already spoken to dela Rosa informing him that he has accepted the money to kill either dela Rosa or Rundren Lao. Pangan was informed that he would receive the gun to kill either of the men today, May 9.

On Sunday May 7, Pangan was transferred to dela Rosa’s detention cell number 3 from the detention cell which was formerly adjacent to Lao’s, who continues to fear for his safety. Pangan has already spoken to dela Rosa expressing his willingness to instead cooperate with him and his lawyer as he fears for his own life as well. Pangan fears that he will be killed immediately after he kills either of the two torture victims.

According to the latest reports, Pangan, just recently, stabbed and seriously wounded two inmantes inside the jail following a violent confrontation. It is believed that perhaps because of Pangan’s involvement in this incident, that those plotting to kill the two torture victims saw the perfect person to do the killing in Pangan.

We have been informed that victim’s lawyers and the Cordillera Human Rights Alliance (CHRA), an umbrella of human rights organisations based in Baguio City, have been informed of Pangan’s identity and the information he has supplied. It is believed the CHRA then informed the jail authorities of this latest development and are satisfied that no harm will come to the two torture victims.

Presently, dela Rosa and Pangan are confined to the same detention cell – number 3. As a result, dela Rosa is living in enormous fear that his life could be taken at any time.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please write to the authorities provided in this mornings update (UP-099-2006) changing the details slightly to include this latest development regarding Pangan’s identity and his informing the two torture victims that he has been paid to kill them and that the gun will be delivered today.

Thank you.


Urgent Appeals Programme
Asian Human Rights Commission (ahrchk@ahrchk.org)

Document Type :
Urgent Appeal Update
Document ID :
UP-100-2006
Countries :
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Extended Introduction: Urgent Appeals, theory and practice

A need for dialogue

Many people across Asia are frustrated by the widespread lack of respect for human rights in their countries.  Some may be unhappy about the limitations on the freedom of expression or restrictions on privacy, while some are affected by police brutality and military killings.  Many others are frustrated with the absence of rights on labour issues, the environment, gender and the like. 

Yet the expression of this frustration tends to stay firmly in the private sphere.  People complain among friends and family and within their social circles, but often on a low profile basis. This kind of public discourse is not usually an effective measure of the situation in a country because it is so hard to monitor. 

Though the media may cover the issues in a broad manner they rarely broadcast the private fears and anxieties of the average person.  And along with censorship – a common blight in Asia – there is also often a conscious attempt in the media to reflect a positive or at least sober mood at home, where expressions of domestic malcontent are discouraged as unfashionably unpatriotic. Talking about issues like torture is rarely encouraged in the public realm.

There may also be unwritten, possibly unconscious social taboos that stop the public reflection of private grievances.  Where authoritarian control is tight, sophisticated strategies are put into play by equally sophisticated media practices to keep complaints out of the public space, sometimes very subtly.  In other places an inner consensus is influenced by the privileged section of a society, which can control social expression of those less fortunate.  Moral and ethical qualms can also be an obstacle.

In this way, causes for complaint go unaddressed, un-discussed and unresolved and oppression in its many forms, self perpetuates.  For any action to arise out of private frustration, people need ways to get these issues into the public sphere.

Changing society

In the past bridging this gap was a formidable task; it relied on channels of public expression that required money and were therefore controlled by investors.  Printing presses were expensive, which blocked the gate to expression to anyone without money.  Except in times of revolution the media in Asia has tended to serve the well-off and sideline or misrepresent the poor.

Still, thanks to the IT revolution it is now possible to communicate with large audiences at little cost.  In this situation there is a real avenue for taking issues from private to public, regardless of the class or caste of the individual.

Practical action

The AHRC Urgent Appeals system was created to give a voice to those affected by human rights violations, and by doing so, to create a network of support and open avenues for action.  If X’s freedom of expression is denied, if Y is tortured by someone in power or if Z finds his or her labour rights abused, the incident can be swiftly and effectively broadcast and dealt with. The resulting solidarity can lead to action, resolution and change. And as more people understand their rights and follow suit, as the human rights consciousness grows, change happens faster. The Internet has become one of the human rights community’s most powerful tools.   

At the core of the Urgent Appeals Program is the recording of human rights violations at a grass roots level with objectivity, sympathy and competence. Our information is firstly gathered on the ground, close to the victim of the violation, and is then broadcast by a team of advocates, who can apply decades of experience in the field and a working knowledge of the international human rights arena. The flow of information – due to domestic restrictions – often goes from the source and out to the international community via our program, which then builds a pressure for action that steadily makes its way back to the source through his or her own government.   However these cases in bulk create a narrative – and this is most important aspect of our program. As noted by Sri Lankan human rights lawyer and director of the Asian Human Rights Commission, Basil Fernando:

"The urgent appeal introduces narrative as the driving force for social change. This idea was well expressed in the film Amistad, regarding the issue of slavery. The old man in the film, former president and lawyer, states that to resolve this historical problem it is very essential to know the narrative of the people. It was on this basis that a court case is conducted later. The AHRC establishes the narrative of human rights violations through the urgent appeals. If the narrative is right, the organisation will be doing all right."

Patterns start to emerge as violations are documented across the continent, allowing us to take a more authoritative, systemic response, and to pinpoint the systems within each country that are breaking down. This way we are able to discover and explain why and how violations take place, and how they can most effectively be addressed. On this path, larger audiences have opened up to us and become involved: international NGOs and think tanks, national human rights commissions and United Nations bodies.  The program and its coordinators have become a well-used tool for the international media and for human rights education programs. All this helps pave the way for radical reforms to improve, protect and to promote human rights in the region.