Business World

Nationwide martial law more imminent with Supreme Court ruling

It is strange that the justices are so quick to admit that they lack the competence and the logistical machinery to delve into military strategy and surrender to the judgment of the President.

- OSCAR P. LAGMAN, JR.

Iwrote in this space last May 30 that martial law throughout the country is coming. This expectatio­n is based on President Rodrigo Duterte’s statements subsequent to his proclamati­on of martial law over the entire island of Mindanao on May 23. Believing that terrorists can easily slip into Mindanao’s neighborin­g islands, the President hinted that he is inclined to declare martial law in the Visayas as well. He has also said that martial law can be expanded to the whole country if terrorists are found to be operating in other parts of the country.

About the possible extension of martial law in Mindanao beyond 60 days, the President told soldiers in Jolo: “Until the police and the Armed Forces say the Philippine­s is safe, this martial law will continue. I will not listen to others. The Supreme Court justices, the congressme­n, they are not here.” As the president, he is the supreme authority over the police force and the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces. He has therefore the final say with regard to the safety of the entire country from terrorists. And upon his proclamati­on by Congress as president-elect, he declared, “I decide alone.” So, he alone will decide if terrorists are operating in other parts of the country.

The Supreme Court’s decision upholding the validity of the declaratio­n of martial law and suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in the entire Mindanao region has also recognized the power of the President to put the entire Philippine­s under martial rule on the basis of the terroristi­c acts taking place in Marawi City. Page 73 of the court’s decision says that the discretion to determine the territoria­l scope of marital law lies with the president. The court further declares that the Constituti­on grants him the prerogativ­e whether to put the entire Philippine­s or any part thereof under martial law as there is no edict that martial law should be confined only in the particular place where the armed public uprising actually transpired.

Page 77 of the decision says that there is reasonable basis to believe that Marawi is only the staging point of the rebellion, both for symbolic and strategic reasons. Marawi may not be the target but the whole of Mindanao. There is also the plan to establish a wilayah (Arabic for province) in Mindanao by staging the siege of Marawi.

Now that the Supreme Court has given its blessing to President Duterte’s predilecti­on to put the entire country under martial rule, martial law all over the land has become imminent.

“Reasonable basis” is not exactly factual basis nor is a plan actual rebellion. It is not clear from the wording of the decision as to who found reasonable basis to believe that Marawi is only the staging point and who discovered the plan to establish an IS province in Mindanao. If it was the President’s uniformed security forces, then the justices had abdicated their duty to establish factual basis for the proclamati­on. If it is the justices, it would be inconsiste­nt with their claim that they are not equipped with the competence and logistical machinery to determine the strategic value of other places in the military’s efforts to quell the rebellion and restore peace.

It is strange that the gods of Padre Faura are so quick to admit that they lack the competence and the logistical machinery to delve into military strategy and surrender to the judgment of the President and his military generals. Yet when it comes to the Reproducti­ve Health law, the court has temporaril­y restrained its full implementa­tion until it has decided whether some contracept­ive devices have abortifaci­ent character or not, instead of admitting lack of competence to make such a determinat­ion as not one of them is a doctor of medicine or a profession­al in a related field of science.

Among the Supreme Court associate justices who granted the President the power to declare martial law anywhere in the country simply on the basis of the possibilit­y that acts of terrorism in a small part of the country may spill over to other parts are Associate Justices Mariano C. del Castillo, the author of the decision, Presbitero J. Velasco, Jr., Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro, Diosdado M. Peralta, Lucas P. Bersamin, Jose C. Mendoza, and Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe. They are the same associate justices who had shown previously their subservien­ce to the wishes of President Duterte when they justified his order to bury former President Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani for reasons that included the claim that he was a bemedalled war veteran, that he was not convicted of any offense involving moral turpitude, and that he was not discharged dishonorab­ly.

To uphold President Duterte’s order, the justices blatantly ignored long establishe­d facts. On Marcos being a bemedalled hero, the fact is that official records of the US military and of the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s do not show that Marcos was awarded any of the medals he claimed to have been awarded him. Jeff Gerth and Joel Brinkley of The

New York Times, after laboriousl­y going over the War files in the in the US National Archives, and historian Alfred McCoy, while doing research on World War II in the Philippine­s, discovered the fraudulenc­e of Marcos medals. They were all obtained years after the war, and through affidavits presented to the Defense department of the Philippine­s when he was already a powerful politician.

Contrary to the justices’ contention that Marcos had not been convicted for reasons of moral turpitude, a US court ruled that Marcos, through his estate, is liable to pay $2 billion in damages to 10,000 victims of human rights violations during his dictatorsh­ip. The Philippine Congress had also passed a law establishi­ng the Human Rights Victims’ Claims Board to compensate victims of his regime, and the Presidenti­al Commission on Good Government has recovered P93 billion in ill-gotten wealth from Marcos and his cronies.

As to Marcos not having been discharged dishonorab­ly, the fact is that the Officer Corps of the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s decided in unceremoni­ous fashion in February 1986 not to recognize him anymore as the commander-in-chief.

That is how the justices twist things to support their biased stand. The other associate justices who upheld the validity of Proclamati­on No. 216 were Bienvenido L. Reyes, Samuel R. Martires, Noel G. Tijam, and Francis Jardeleza. It will be recalled that Justice Reyes declined to take a stand on the issue of Marcos’s burial at the Libingan ng mga Bayani in deference to former President Benigno S. C. Aquino III, who appointed him to the Supreme Court, and to his San Beda College of Law classmate and Lex Talionis fraternity brod President Duterte. That was a sorry display of lack of fortitude. Justices Martires and Tijam are fellow San Beda Law alumni of the President and his first appointees (days of each other) to the Supreme Court.

These are the men and women of the highest court of the land. Theirs is not to reason why, theirs is but to comply with the wishes of Pres. Rodrigo Duterte.

These pliant justices constitute the Presidenti­al Electoral Tribunal. Maybe we can expect them to decide on the basis of the wishes of the President. A devout wish of his is the proclamati­on of Bongbong Marcos as the winner in the election of the vicepresid­ent in 2016. �

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines