Philippines: Rebel Executions Violate International Law
Communist New People’s Army Killing of Mayor, Son May
Worsen Human Rights Situation of Lumads
Press release by Human Rights Watch
(Manila, October 28, 2015) – The communist New People’s
Army (NPA) in the Philippines executed the mayor of a small town and his son on
October 19, 2015, in violation of international humanitarian law, Human Rights
Watch said today. Throughout its four-decade insurgency, the rebel group has
frequently executed people found “guilty” by its so-called people’s courts,
which do not meet basic fair trial standards.
In a statement on October 25, the NPA took responsibility
for the killing of Dario Otaza, 53, mayor of Loreto town in Agusan del Sur
province, and his son Daryl, 27, calling their execution “revolutionary
justice.” NPA fighters, posing as law enforcement agents, raided the Otaza home
in nearby Butuan City on October 19. Authorities found the two men’s bodies the
next day with multiple gunshot wounds.
“The killing of the Otazas – like other NPA executions –
is just plain murder,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human
Rights Watch. “The NPA’s actions and claims of revolutionary justice handed
down by people’s courts are flagrant violations of international law.”
The NPA accused the Otazas of working for the Philippine
armed forces and masterminding the killing of at least three people. They also
accused the victims of taking part in attacks on and the forced displacement of
indigenous peoples in the province, torturing children, attempted murders, and
arson, among other crimes.
As a party to an internal armed conflict, the NPA is
obligated to abide by international humanitarian law, including common article
3 to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and its Second Additional Protocol of 1977
(Protocol II), to which the Philippines is party. International humanitarian
law prohibits killing civilians, mistreating anyone in custody, and convicting
anyone in proceedings that do not meet international fair trial standards.
Article 6 of Protocol II specifies that criminal courts must be independent and
impartial, and the accused shall have “all necessary rights and means of
defense,” among other guarantees. Those tried by people’s courts are typically
convicted in absentia, thus denied the right to be tried in one’s presence
before an impartial court.
Claims by the NPA that defendants receive a fair hearing
during its people’s court proceedings are not supported by the facts, Human
Rights Watch said. Philip Alston, the former United Nations special rapporteur
on extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions who investigated
extrajudicial killings in the Philippines in 2007, described the people’s courts
as “either deeply flawed or simply a sham.”
The NPA has long admitted to killing government officials
and civilians whom the NPA deems to have engaged in acts “against the people.”
They have also killed allegedly traitorous NPA or Communist Party members.
On April 21, 2014, NPA rebels shot and killed Mayor
Carlito Pentecostes Jr. of Gonzaga town, Cagayan province. On July 27, 2012, they killed Datu Causing
Ogao, a leader of an indigenous people’s group, in Davao City. On February 28,
2011, they killed Jeffrey Nerveza, a civilian, in Albay, Bicol. On August 19,
2011, the NPA killed Raymundo “Monding” Agaze in Kabankalan City, Negros
Occidental. On July 13, 2010, NPA members shot and killed Mateo Biong, Jr., a
former mayor of Giporlos town, Eastern Samar. That same month, they shot and
killed Sergio Villadar, a sugar cane farmer, in Escalante City, Negros
Occidental. All of these people, the NPA claimed, had been found guilty by its
people’s courts.
In its October 25, 2015 statement announcing the deaths
of the Otazas, the NPA said it is waging a “people’s war” and it “has been
pursuing revolutionary justice by meting appropriate capital punishment against
war criminals to remove the continuation of the human rights violations and
render justice.”
The NPA killings may worsen the human rights situation in
Agusan del Sur and other provinces in the southern Philippines, where the
military and its paramilitary forces have been implicated in extrajudicial
killings and forced displacement, particularly against indigenous peoples,
Human Rights Watch said. Human Rights Watch has documented several of these
abuses and has called on the Philippine government to bring perpetrators to
justice.
“By resorting to vigilantism in the name of justice, the
NPA is only serving to harm its own demands for justice for victims of military
human rights violations,” Robertson said. “The NPA should end this charade of
unjust ‘people’s courts’ and cease all executions.”
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