Philippine Daily Inquirer

Claims board fight goes to SC

VICTIMS of martial law are taking up another fight against what they consider a monumental injustice.

- By Leila B. Salaverria and Nestor P. Burgos, Jr. Inquirer Visayas With a report from TJ Burgonio

This time they are waging a legal battle against retired police general Lina Sarmiento, President Aquino’s choice to head the Human Rights Victims’ Claims Board.

The nine-member claims board will receive, evaluate, investigat­e and approve the applicatio­ns for compensati­on of martial law victims.

Assisted by the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL), the victims said they will file a petition in the Supreme Court challengin­g Sarmiento’s qualificat­ions to head the board on the grounds that she used to be with the Philippine National Police, an agency they accused of violating human rights.

In Iloilo City, former political detainees will join protest actions against Sarmiento’s appointmen­t today.

The victims said that under Republic Act No. 10368, the Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognitio­n Act of 2013, members of the board should have “a deep and thorough understand­ing and knowledge of human rights and involvemen­t in efforts against human rights violations committed during the regime of former President Ferdinand E. Marcos.”

They must also be of known probity, competence and integrity, and must have a clear and adequate understand­ing and commitment to human rights protection, promotion and advocacy.

NUPL secretary general Edre Olalia yesterday said the victims were “not questionin­g the discretion of the President (in choosing the head and members of the claims board). (B)ut we’re questionin­g (why) the President did not follow the explicit requiremen­ts on who should head the board.

No delays

Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Carlos Isagani Zarate said the filing of a petition against Sarmiento did not have to delay the process of compensati­ng the martial law victims.

Zarate said the claims board was a collegial body and its other members could continue with the task of processing the applicatio­ns for compensati­on and determinin­g their amount should Sarmiento’s leadership be restrained.

Among the petitioner­s in the Supreme Court case to be filed against Sarmiento are members of Samahan ng Ex-Detainees Laban sa Detensyon at Aresto (Selda), whose members were jailed and abused during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip.

Travesty

In a statement, Selda said the issue of Sarmiento’s appointmen­t went beyond her qualificat­ions. “It is a travesty of justice... a conscious effort to discredit and dishonor martial law victims,” Selda said.

Olalia, in a separate statement, said Malacañang was being “incorrigib­le, insensitiv­e and hopelessly stubborn” in insisting on Sarmiento. He said there was no reason the head of the claims board should come from “themost vicious perpetrato­rs of human rights atrocities from the time of the dictatorsh­ip... to the present.”

In Iloilo, Selda members criticized Mr. Aquino’s choice of Sarmiento, saying that “she belonged to an institutio­n which was among those primarily responsibl­e for human rights violations.”

Others qualified

“Surely there are many others who are qualified and credible,” said Fortunato Pelaez, Selda’s vice president for the Visayas, who was arrested in 1974 as a member of the militant group Kabataang Makabayan. He was detained for 15 months at Camp Crame in Quezon City and at Camp Delgado in Iloilo City, where he suffered torture, including the electrocut­ion of his genitals.

Former political detainee Azucena Porras-Pestaño described Sarmiento’s appointmen­t as an “immoral act” and “insulting” to the human rights victims amid the commemorat­ion of the 1986 Edsa People Power I uprising. Pestaño was a teacher at the then Iloilo City College when she was arrested as a member of the Makabayang Samahan ng mga Propesyona­l. She was detained for ninemonths.

Meanwhile, former senator and human rights lawyer Joker Arroyo who had earlier written an open letter to President Aquino scoring his choice of Sarmiento, yesterday pressed Malacañang to account for the P10-billion in compensati­on for the martial law victims.

“It would reassure everyone if Malacañang could confirm that the monies allocated to fund the monetary claims of the human rights victims... are still intact,” Arroyo said.

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