Military held liable for disappeared activists
MANILA, Philippines — The Court of Appeals has held the military accountable for the disappearance of labor organizers Elizabeth Magbanua and Alipio Juat and ordered top security officials to speedily locate the disappeared activists.
“Without any specific pronouncement on exact authorship and responsibility, [the Court] declare(s) the respondents (military) accountable for the enforced disappearance and continued disappearance of Magbanua and Juat,” the court said on Friday in an order granting the writ of amparo sought by the activists’ families.
Magbanua, a women and workers’ rights activists, and Juat, a Marcos martial law survivor and activist, were last seen on May 3 in a meeting with other activists in Valenzuela City when they were nabbed by government troops.
The three-member CA division ordered Armed Forces chief of staff Lt. Gen. Bartolome Bacarro, Jose Faustino Jr., officer in charge of the Department of National Defense, National Intelligence Coordinating Agency Director General Ricardo de Leon and Army chief Lt. Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. to use all “technological resources at its disposal.”
The appellate court also ordered the impleaded officials to “cause the speedy conduct of a comprehensive and exhaustive investigation using extraordinary diligence on the continued disappearance of Magbanua and Juat.”
Article continues after this advertisementThe security officials were also ordered to “utilize all technical and modern technological resources at its disposal to assist in locating their whereabouts and once and for all determine the truth behind their continued disappearance.”
Article continues after this advertisementThe security officials were given six months to submit a “detailed written report explaining the results of their action.”
The appellate court division, composed of Associate Justices Apolinario Bruselas Jr., Ronaldo Martin and Alfonso Ruiz II, also issued a permanent protection order for Magbanua and Juat and their immediate families.
Magbanua’s life partner Ruth Manglalan and niece Alyssa Magbanua, together with Juat’s daughter Maureen Juat filed a petition for a writ of amparo with the Supreme Court last Aug. 10.
Magbanua’s relatives said they have not heard from her since May 3. On the other hand, Juat’s daughter said he visited his other daughters on four occasions since his May 3 disappearance, and that he told his daughters he is being held in the military headquarters, Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City.
In Aug. 23, the Supreme Court ordered the Court of Appeals to hold a summary hearing on Aug. 30 and issue a decision within 10 days after hearing the case.