Deferred hope stirring: 2

You can seal  truth in a grave. But it will  always  break free.” Easter hammered that truth over the last 2000 years. Before Easter 2013, did the entombed truth about  journalist Jonas Burgos’ abduction  start  to emerge in a Court of Appeals  decision?

The Armed Forces must account for the April 28, 2007  “enforced disappearance” of then 36-year-old Burgos, the CA ruled. It found that the 56th Infantry Battalion officers shoved a screaming Burgos into an impounded maroon Toyota Revo (plate no. TAB 194) from a Quezon City mall. He has not  been seen since.

Generals Hermogenes Esperon and  Romeo Tolentino, plus officers  Juanito Gomez, Delfin Bangit, etc.— were “imputed with knowledge relating to Burgos’ disappearance,” the Court ruled. Officers zippered their lips. The Court took this  as “persuasive proof of the alleged cover-up,” the Commission on Human Rights noted.

The Marcos dictatorship co-opted military leaders. Joseph Estrada  shrugged when appraised of disappearances. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo took  military impunity to new depths. She praised Maj. General Jovito Palparan for “suppressing  rebels.” Over 700 human rights abuse cases were racked up by Palaparan in Central  Luzon. Activists called him “the butcher.”

Like GMA, Palparan was stopped at the airport while fleeing to Singapore. He went underground.  “Palparan was being protected by some military officials and businessmen who benefited from his high-handed suppression of the communist insurgency,” says the US-based Human Rights Watch.

Military agents ducked, by alibis, demands by relatives of desaparecidos, for  remedy through a writ of habeas corpus , an order to “produce the body”. To plug this loophole,  Chief Justice Reynato Puno and Justice Adolfo Azcuna wrote into law two additional safeguards:  the writs of amparo and habeas data.

These two writs scrub mere denials on petitions on disappearances or extrajudicial executions. Backed by President Benigno Aquino III’s judicial refroms,  the mother of Jonas, used those writs to compel the military to come clean. Edith is  widow of Jose Burgos, Jr., one of the world’s “50 Press Freedom Heroes of the Century” named by the International Press Institute,

“Official impunity for crime here drives parents to wear down the stones of public squares,” Viewpoint noted (PDI/May 2007). An   Inquirer photo shows Edith staring at a dumped corpse in the macabre  ritual that mothers of desaparecidos agonize through. “No, Edith says,” the article reports. It’s not the body of her third child: 36-year-old agriculturist Jonas….”

Inquirer captioned a separate photo “The Unbearable Wait.”  It depicts  two gaunt women at Pagasinan’s  Labrador Public Cemetery. They stare at an exhumed coffin, sealed in blue plastic. They’re mothers  of  desaparecidos  Erlinda Capdapan and Concepcion Empeño. They view the casket, containing the remains of a female, the caption explains. “DNA testing at Philippine General Hospital may show if she was one of their daughters”. (It did not).

Here, the President gives an order to stop  summary killings and abductions and nothing happens. Rather, “the same thing happens again and again.” Presidents Estrada and Arroyo agreed with what Pope John Paul II told Ferdinand Marcos to his face: “Government cannot claim to serve the common good when human rights are not safeguarded.”

But their administrations didn’t  extend  to families of  desaparecidos, “even the balm of pinpointed graves.” Neither have Filipino communists. They shrug aside similar pleas from relatives of victims in their pogroms of the 1980s.

In a Mother’s Day gathering of desaparecido parents at Quezon City’s Good Shepherd convent, Edith said: “I have forgiven my son’s abductors, his torturers, and even their Commander in Chief. If we accept what has happened, and forgive the wrong done us, the dawn will come early.…”

“The weak can never forgive,” Asian statesman Mahatma Ghandi once said. “Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong… (Even when violence appears) to do good, the good is only temporary. The evil it does is permanent….”

Forgiveness, however, does not extinguish accountability. “Men are unable to forgive what they can not punish,” Hannah Arendt stresses in her essay on Nazi terror.

That’s precisely the point of “Let the Stones Cry Out.” Published by the Protestant National Council of Churches here, this 83-page report documents 836 politically motivated killings since 2001. Most remain unsolved.

After the killing of Indonesian priest Fr. Franciskus Madhu, SVD, in Kalinga, Catholic bishop Prudencio Andaya asked: “Perhaps, we’ve been too silent for a long time, afraid to speak out against all killings in the past that we tolerated more killings to happen!”

A culture of impunity– where traitor, abductor or torturer go free– does not emerge full-blown over night. It builds up incrementally, stoked by official support, tolerance and silence. “A man begins to die the moment he remains silent about things that matter,” Martin Luther King warned.

We wrote earlier  of  “deferred hope stirring” (Viewpoint / July 16, 2010).   The Easter 2013 Court of Appeals  decision is about  those  hopes  coming to pass– finally. Thanks to strong women like Edith, our grandchildren need not suffer the same fate their own kids did.

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