Philippine Daily Inquirer

ML brings soldiers to ‘lumad’ villages

Activists claim Mindanao martial law shifted focus from terrorism to tribes fighting for ancestral domain

- —STORYBY FRINSTON LIM

DAVAO CITY— The defeat of the Maute Group in Marawi City has brought cheer to many. But the imposition of martial law on Mindanao as an offshoot of the siege by the Islamic Stateinspi­red group has brought about the massive deployment of soldiers in “lumad” (indigenous) communitie­s, forcing villagers to flee in Surigao del Sur.

DAVAO CITY— Shortly after President Duterte assumed power two years ago, “lumad” leaders set foot in Malacañang in disbelief after Mr. Duterte invited them for a dialogue on lumad killings and militariza­tion of lumad schools and communitie­s.

Two years later, they described their suffering as “unthinkabl­e,” said Ryan Amper, spokespers­on for Barug Katungod, a group that monitors the human rights situation in Mindanao.

After Mr. Duterte threatened to bomb lumad schools and ordered their closure, the Armed Forces used lumad communitie­s as encampment­s for military operations, the group said.

Since May 23 last year, when the attack by the Islamic Stateinspi­red Maute group in Marawi City triggered the declaratio­n of martial law in the entire Mindanao, more than half a million people have been displaced.

New targets

Barug Katungod said that after the Maute group had been vanquished in Marawi, the government trained its guns on lumad communitie­s in other parts of Mindanao where a war has been raging between soldiers and the communist New People’s Army (NPA).

As thousands of families remain displaced by the siege in Marawi, another humanitari­an crisis unfolded in Lianga, Surigao del Sur province, where over a thousand members of the Manobo tribe fled their communitie­s in the village of Diatagon because of the heavy presence of soldiers.

Maj. Ezra Balagtey, spokespers­on for the military’s Eastern Mindanao Command, denied any massive military presence in the affected communitie­s, saying only a handful of troops were stationed there.

He said, however, that the military was checking the allegation­s made by rights groups.

Rights group Karapatan documented a total of 326 lumad families from 15 communitie­s who left their homes and took refuge in the village of Diatagon, the latest wave of evacuation­s triggered by their fear of getting caught in the crossfire or being labeled as NPA sympathize­rs.

This was the latest in a series of evacuation­s by the lumad and farmers from remote areas in Davao and Caraga regions, where the declaratio­n of martial law brought about increased military presence.

Schools closed

Karapatan said the latest case in Lianga also resulted in the closure of eight alternativ­e schools run by nongovernm­ent organizati­ons (NGOs) and affected 48 teachers and 568 students.

As of June, there were at least 106 alternativ­e schools in lumad communitie­s that were either forcibly closed down or did not conduct classes in Mindanao’s four regions as a result of attacks, threats and harassment by government forces.

The rights group said these attacks on lumad schools displaced a total of 2,019 lumad students.

Barug Katungod claimed it had documented a total of 532 cases of supposed attacks on lumad schools in the region during the Duterte administra­tion.

Amper, Barug Katungod Mindanao spokespers­on, said 385 of the attacks on lumad schools, or 72 percent, happened since martial rule was declared following the May 23 Marawi war.

Daily attacks

“One to two lumad schools are attacked every day for almost two years,” Amper said.

He said the attacks ranged from military encampment in schools, torture, threats and harassment, denial of humanitari­an aid, arrests and prosecutio­n of school officials and teachers, red-tagging, fake surrenders and outright shutting down of schools.

Military and local officials denied the rights group’s allegation even as they accused these groups of instigatin­g the evacuation of lumad families even if there was no clear threat of military operations in communitie­s.

“As Duterte takes his third Sona (State of the Nation Ad- dress), more than 5,000 all over Mindanao are in evacuation camps due to the AFP’s escalation of ‘Oplan Kapayapaan,’” Amper said.

“He is expected to brag about the sweeping fake and staged ‘surrenders’ of peasant and indigenous peoples as vaunted NPA combatants,” he said.

War trophy

“Talaingod Datu Guibang Apoga was the AFP’s war trophy,” he said, referring to Apoga, a Manobo leader in Talaingod who became a fugitive because of the “pangayao,” or tribal war, he waged against the big company Alcantara and Sons, which he accused of encroachin­g into the ancestral lands of Talaingod Manobo.

Barug Katungod also claimed that at least 618 civilians, mostly political activists, across Mindanao had been charged with fabricated criminal offenses.

Human rights defenders in urban areas have also been the subject of the government political crackdown on dissent with the arrest and detention of the 13 activists in General Santos City, the continued detention of Delia Catubay and Emilio Gabales, the trumped up charges against woman activist Nerita de Castro and the increased harassment of developmen­t workers, the latest of which is Elviza Amante of the humanitari­an NGO Direct.

“During the campaign period, Duterte was photograph­ed with a banner that says ‘ Stop Lumad Killings’ and which was directed at the hated Benigno Aquino III’s inutile regime,” Amper said. “Now the message is lost on Duterte and he himself has become its bloody sponsor.”

Military side

But military officials said martial law did not result in the closure of schools and supposed victims of abuses by soldiers could file formal complaints “and substantia­te their claims.”

Balagtey said soldiers in Eastern Mindanao had lived up to their mandate of protecting the indigenous peoples (IP) in the region and respected their basic rights.

“Our units are working for the protection of the social and cultural rights of different IP communitie­s in Eastern Mindanao,” Balagtey told the Inquirer.

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 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? RAGING FIRE Activists burn an effigy of President Duterte at a rally in May near Malacañang Palace, demanding an end to martial law in Mindanao.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E RAGING FIRE Activists burn an effigy of President Duterte at a rally in May near Malacañang Palace, demanding an end to martial law in Mindanao.

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