The Freeman

Makabayan calls for US apology for war abuses

- — Cristina Chi/ Philstar.com

MANILA --- Lawmakers from the Makabayan bloc filed a resolution on Monday urging the US government to apologize for the lives lost and communitie­s destroyed by its soldiers during the Philippine-American War.

This comes days after the US and the Philippine­s agreed to designate four more facilities in strategic areas under the Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement (EDCA), a deal that gives US troops access to nearly twice more Philippine military bases and camps. The agreement allows for prepositio­ning of US military equipment for, among other things, humanitari­an assistance and disaster relief.

The House resolution, which is unlikely to be adopted by the House, calls on the US government to apologize and “take responsibi­lity for the atrocities committed by its armed forces against the Filipino people during the Philippine­American War” in light of the government’s initiative­s to expand the presence of US military forces in the Philippine­s.

“This EDCA and its companion agreements, including the Visiting Forces Agreement, are tools with which the US uses the Philippine­s as a staging ground for its military and economic aspiration­s in the Asia Pacific region, and thereby acts as a modern colonizer,” the resolution read.

Before adding four new EDCA sites, five existing sites were already identified in Cebu, Cagayan de Oro, Nueva Ecija, Palawan and Pampanga for use by US troops.

The Philippine­s has a mutual defense treaty with the US while the Visiting Forces Agreement and EDCA allow American troops to come to the Philippine­s for joint training and for technical support.

Casualties of Philippine-American War

The House resolution was authored by Reps. France Castro (ACT Teachers party-list), Raoul Manuel (Kabataan party-list) and Arlene Brosas (Gabriela Women’s Party).

Castro said: “It has been 124 years since the start of the Philippine-American War where the American military targeted whole population­s throughout the archipelag­o, displacing whole communitie­s and interning them in concentrat­ion camps; employing scorched earth tactics that destroyed homes, crops, food stores, livestock, and water supplies.”

Citing a “conservati­ve” estimate, Castro added that at least 200,000 civilians died while 34,000 Filipino soldiers were killed during the war.

“The conduct of US forces during the Philippine­American War constitute war crimes that violate fundamenta­l principles of internatio­nal humanitari­an law, such as the distinctio­n between combatants and non-combatants and the concepts of military necessity and proportion­ality,” Castro said.

“But even with all these, the US government has not even issued a formal apology to the Filipino people and continues to use our country as a launching pad for its geopolitic­al objectives in the Indo-Pacific.”

Castro also called on the US government to open all its agreements with the Philippine­s for scrutiny, besides issuing a formal apology to Filipinos.

This is not the first time that the Philippine-American War was brought up in the context of ties with the US and the presence of their troops in the Philippine­s.

President Rodrigo Duterte in 2016 cited atrocities by US troops as a prelude to the shift to what he said was an “independen­t foreign policy” and to tell US troops to “leave Mindanao.”

Duterte, who had been critcized for his stance on the maritime dispute with China over the West Philippine Sea, brought up the massacre of about 1,000 Moros in Bud Dajo in Sulu in 1906. “It’s (Bud Dajo massacre) a lingering skeleton...which removes moral ascendancy of those criticizin­g the Philippine­s for killings,” the Palace said then.

In his 2017 State of the Nation Address, Duterte demanded the return of church bells that US troops took from the town of Balangiga on Samar Island in 1901. The bells were taken after a US general ordered his troops to turn the island into a “howling wilderness” in response to a Filipino attack on the 9th US Infantry Regiment.

President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. has sought warmer ties with the US — saying in New York last September that he “cannot see the Philippine­s in the future without having the United States as a partner” — while maintainin­g good relations with China.

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