Philippine Daily Inquirer

WATCHDOG OF NEGROS KILLINGS, ABUSES SLAIN

- By Nestor P. Burgos Jr. and Carla P. Gomez @inquirervi­sayas

BACOLOD CITY—FOR the past three years, Zara Alvarez had been monitoring and documentin­g the killings and arrest of farmers, lawyers and activists on Negros Island. She organized missions to look into cases of suspected human rights violations, coordinate­d with lawyers and helped families of the victims.

Around 7 p.m. on Monday, Alvarez became a victim herself.

A man wearing a face mask and a cap shot her repeatedly as she was walking with two others to her boarding house at Eroreco Subdivisio­n in Barangay Mandalagan here.

Alvarez, 39, a single mother to an 11-year-old girl, died outright.

“Witnesses heard six gunshots. She was shot first on the back,” Police Capt. Richard Pajarito, chief of Station 3 of the city police, told the Inquirer on Tuesday.

The assailant fled on a motorcycle driven by an accomplice, Pajarito said.

Alvarez, a former political detainee, served as a paralegal for the human rights group Karapatan and as research and advocacy officer of the nongovernm­ental organizati­on Negros Island Health Integrated Program.

Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos, Negros Occidental, was grief-stricken.

“I bleed due to this neverendin­g injustice and violence. I just cannot believe this continuing madness of senseless killings. These systemic killings of human rights defenders and activists must be condemned and must stop,” Alminaza said in a statement on Tuesday.

He described Alvarez as a champion against injustice, always ready to organize farmers, peasants, workers, jeepney drivers and even church people for the cause.

“Zara, they took your life, believing that they can silence the cause you are fighting for,” Alminaza said. “But no, Zara, your martyrdom in the cause for justice will inspire us to advance the cry for justice—the cry of the oppressed.”

Alvarez was the 89th victim of killings of human rights defenders, lawyers and other activists since January 2017 on Negros Island based on a list she had helped compile and update.

Karapatan said she was the 13th human rights worker of the group killed since

President Duterte took office in 2016.

“Zara Alvarez was a fierce and dedicated human rights defender, and her death is a tremendous loss for all of us and those who worked with her in advancing and defending people’s rights and we strongly call for justice,” Karapatan secretary general Cristina Palabay said.

Alvarez was attacked just hours after slain Anakpawis chair and peace talks consultant Randall Echanis was buried in Marikina City. Echanis was stabbed and shot by unidentifi­ed assailants in Quezon City a week earlier.

Activist groups suspect that state agents were responsibl­e for both killings.

List of terrorists Echanis and Alvarez were among 600 people listed as terrorists by the Department of Justice (DOJ) in 2018 in a proscripti­on petition in the regional trial court of Manila. They were removed from the list after the petition was amended last year.

Alvarez, however, continued to receive “relentless threats, vilificati­on and harassment from the military,” Palabay said.

“It will not do justice to the victim and the family if the public engages in guesswork and speculatio­n,” Police Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac, the Philippine National Police spokespers­on, said in reaction to allegation­s that state agents were involved in the killing of Alvarez.

“A proper investigat­ion by Bacolod City Police is under way. We urge all concerned to allow the investigat­ion to proceed sans unfounded allegation­s that only distract the focus of our investigat­ors,” he said. “Anyone who has informatio­n that can help quickly solve the case is welcome.”

Noncombata­nts Karapatan said 318 individual­s who were noncombata­nts, including 182 human rights defenders, have been killed in the implementa­tion of the government’s counterins­urgency program from July 2016 to June 30 this year. It said 259 farmers were separately killed in politicall­y motivated attacks during the same period.

Among the prominent human rights activists killed recently were Elisa “Nene” Badayos and Elioterio Moises, who were gunned down on Nov. 28, 2019, in Bayawan City in Negros Oriental.

Badayos was provincial coordinato­r for Karapatan, while Moises was a member of the farmers’ group Mantapi Ebwan Farmers Associatio­n. They were taking part in a mission which investigat­ed alleged human rights violations in Negros Oriental when they were attacked.

On April 30, masked men killed Bayan Muna Iloilo City coordinato­r Jose Reynaldo “Jory” Porquia, a popular activist during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip.

In Manila, Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Isagani Zarate said the “attacks against the political opposition and critics of the administra­tion is really getting more intense.”

Meant to sow fear

“It seems that the said (DOJ “terrorist”) list has become a hit list of sorts as many of those named are now either arrested on trumped-up charges or worse, ended up being assassinat­ed,” he said.

In May last year, an unknown person sent a text message to the Karapatan national office, warning that Alvarez would be the next to be killed in Negros after Escalante City Councilor and human rights advocate Bernardino “Toto” Patigas was gunned down.

Siegfred Deduro, Bayan Muna vice president for Visayas, said the killings of Alvarez and Porquia were “terrorist acts” meant to sow fear among those critical of the government.

“The Duterte regime is hellbent in resorting to the killing of political dissenters in a futile attempt to silence the growing anger of the people against the worsening health and economic crisis resulting from flawed policies and corruption,” Deduro told the Inquirer.

The Senate committees on public order and dangerous drugs and on justice and human rights, which jointly investigat­ed the Negros killings, released their report in January recommendi­ng that an anticommun­ist vigilante group “Kagubak” be investigat­ed for the killings perpetuate­d by unidentifi­ed assailants.

Killings despite pandemic

In an interview with the Inquirer on July 23, Alvarez raised concern over the continued killings of activists in Negros despite the pandemic.

“The killings have continued even amid quarantine measures when movement is supposedly restricted. How many more will die?” she told the Inquirer.

Bayan Muna Chair Neri Colmenares said the President was “ultimately accountabl­e for publicly threatenin­g human rights activists and practicall­y ordering their killings.”

“Despite his cowardly denial of his involvemen­t in extrajudic­ial killings, he has not publicly withdrawn his threats against activists nor ordered the perpetrato­rs to stop the killings,” he added.

 ?? OF KARAPATAN —PHOTO COURTESY ?? Zara Alvarez
OF KARAPATAN —PHOTO COURTESY Zara Alvarez

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