The Philippine Star

Red recruitmen­t

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It looks like sanity is starting to prevail and government security forces are approachin­g reports of a supposed plot to oust President Duterte with prudence.

The Philippine National Police is meeting with officials of the Commission on Higher Education and administra­tors of 18 universiti­es and colleges regarding reports of recruitmen­t being conducted in the schools by the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) mostly through film showings.

If the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s wants to preserve its credibilit­y and the public trust that it has regained in recent years, it should join the dialogue and even backpedal like mad from its claim about a Red October plot to oust Duterte.

Already, the AFP has become the butt of jokes after its top officers admitted at a congressio­nal budget hearing that the opposition Liberal Party and Magdalo party-list were in fact not linked to Red October.

As for the Reds, it’s a rebel group, the members are rebelling, and what’s the goal of a rebellion?

* * * The communists have been recruiting at the University of the Philippine­s in Diliman, Quezon City even when I was a student ages ago, when there were frequent mass actions on campus with the participan­ts waving red flags.

A dear friend was recruited, leaving me to do our joint term paper in one class because of her frequent absences. At least she didn’t suffer the fate of UP activists Sherlyn Cadapan and Karen Empeño, who remain missing after being kidnapped by the military on orders (as establishe­d by the Malolos trial court) of the unapologet­ic “Butcher” of Bulacan Jovito Palparan.

I learned about my classmate’s recruitmen­t only when I became a reporter, and state intelligen­ce agents told me she was on their list of suspected New People’s Army amazons or at the very least an NPA sympathize­r. There were other personalit­ies high on their target list, however, and she was spared from arrest.

I’m not the only one whose reaction to military reports of communist recruitmen­t in UP Diliman and Manila (UP Los Baños students are reportedly complainin­g about their school’s exclusion from the list) is: so what else is new? Or, as a colleague often says when presented with stale news – “si Rizal, patay na” – asking if the bearer of the old news is aware that Jose Rizal is dead.

* * * Even the PNP spokesman, Chief Superinten­dent Benigno Durana, says as much. It’s the AFP, not the PNP that is accused of engaging in Red-baiting, Durana stressed at the outset as he fielded questions from us on “The Chiefs” last Friday on Cignal TV’s One News channel.

The PNP has related intelligen­ce informatio­n on communist recruitmen­t in certain schools, Durana told us. He wouldn’t categorica­lly say if the intel is A-1 or raw F-6. But he said a more prudent approach would have been for the AFP to meet with the administra­tors of the 18 universiti­es and colleges on the list instead of publicly identifyin­g the schools.

Durana also said that while the communists may be engaged in continuing recruitmen­t and the objective of a rebellion is to overthrow the government, they don’t have the capability to succeed.

But he echoed a warning from PNP chief Oscar Albayalde, that there are limits to academic freedom, and professors who incite their students to rebel against the government can face administra­tive and other sanctions.

UP Diliman chancellor Michael Tan, who was also a guest on The Chiefs together with filmmaker Hector Barretto Calma, fears that such warnings can endanger the flourishin­g of critical thinking and lead to a witch-hunt.

Who will draw the line between criticizin­g the government and inciting to rebellion or sedition? And what could be the impact of fear on critical thinking and innovation?

Tan brought with him to The Chiefs a replica of the Filipino-built Maya nanosatell­ite, which was developed under a program jointly carried out by UP and the Department of Science and Technology together with Japan’s Kyushu Institute of Technology. Maya-1 was launched into space on June 29 this year at Cape Canaveral in Florida, and deployed into orbit from the Internatio­nal Space Station on Aug. 10. It measures only 10 x 10 x 11.35 cm and weighs just 1.11 kilograms.

What’s the connection of Maya-1 with Red October? Not that “maya” is Filipino for sparrow; the CPP’s urban hit squad Sparrow Unit has nothing to do with it. Tan explained that unfettered critical and creative thinking made Maya-1 possible.

Calma, who will soon be showing in regular cinemas his movie about an NPA amazon that has a PG rating from the MTRCB, pointed out that there have been more showings of documentar­ies about martial law in schools because of two recent events: the anniversar­y of the declaratio­n of martial law last month, and that tete-a-tete uploaded on Facebook between Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. and his father ’s former defense chief, Juan Ponce Enrile.

The historical revisionis­m espoused by the two had the effect of heightenin­g student interest in finding out the truth about what happened during Marcos’ martial law, Calma and Tan told us. It has nothing to do with any ouster plot and the CPP is not behind the film showings, the two stressed.

* * * Among the presidents, Duterte, who describes himself as a socialist in his youth, can be considered to be the most sympatheti­c to the communists. He brought them into his Cabinet, allowed one of their front organizati­ons to occupy a housing project for military and police, and revived the peace negotiatio­ns (now stalled again).

So Duterte should be keenly aware of the root causes of the communist rebellion in our country, and the fact that CPP members and sympathize­rs in the Philippine­s are unlike those in communist countries past and present.

(Related to this, my memory is starting to fail me: contrary to what I wrote, Russian Ambassador Igor Khovaev did not describe himself as a communist. What he told me, off-camera, was, “I am a guy who was born and raised in a communist country.” Last week he clarified to me that his adherence is “to only one ideology – the national interests of my country.” My apologies to the ambassador.)

The communist Soviet Union imploded. It’s unlikely that communism as an ideology will gain enough adherents, even among the most impression­able Filipino youths, to succeed in this country. But Red-baiting can fuel suspicions that someone is laying the groundwork for a crackdown on political dissent.

Our recent history shows that such a crackdown can make a rebel movement stronger.

* * * Oops: The National Day of South Korea is on Oct. 3, not Oct. 4. Sorry, my mistake.

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