The Freeman

Justice sought for deaths of nine sugar workers

- Philstar.com

MANILA — Activist groups on Wednesday launched the Justice for Sagay Massacre Network to call for accountabi­lity for the deaths of nine sugar workers in Negros Occidental in October that authoritie­s have blamed on the New People's Army.

The network also includes rights advocates and relatives of the victims of the October 20 shooting in a portion of a hacienda in Sagay City where members of the National Federation of Sugar Workers were conducting "bungkalan" or land cultivatio­n.

The government has blamed the killings on the NSFW—saying the group had duped members into getting killed—and on the NPA, which has denied involvemen­t and has pointed out that most of its members come from farming communitie­s.

"The Sagay 9 issue has been muddled with so many lies from a government scared to be exposed as champions and coddlers of private armies and landlords," Karapatan secretary general Cristina Palabay said in a statement.

"The military brandished their fictional destabiliz­ation plot narrative while the police trained its harassment team against the lawyers and rights defenders aiding the family of victims and survivors of the incident," she said.

She said that despite these, "the root causes of landlessne­ss and the dire situation of farmers and farmworker­s in the country remain a neon sign staring authoritie­s in the face."

Advocates of land reform and farmers' rights have pointed out that the "bungkalan," where unused plots of land are planted with crops to tide sugar workers and farmers over during lean seasons called "tiempo muerte" are a response to landlessne­ss, especially on Negros Island.

President Rodrigo Duterte has said the NPA is to be blamed for the killings and has said security personnel should evict farmers who occupy idle land.

"If they resist while armed with a bolo, shoot them or else you will die because when they chop you up, you’re dead," he also said.

The government has since announced that it will be deploying more troops in areas where have been "lawless violence."

Among those areas is Negros Occidental and among the incidents that the Palace said prompted the deployment is the Sagay killings.

In late October, provincial police filed charges against NFSW members Rene Manlangit and Rogelio Arquillo for allegedly conspiring with an armed group in planning the attack that killed nine NFSW members.

Police have also filed a kidnapping and serious illegal detention complaint against lawyer Katherine Panguban, head of the National Union of People's Lawyers Women and Children's Committee, for allegedly holding a minor who was a witness to the killings and his mother against their will.

NUPL has since responded that the mother engaged them as counsel and that "this legal representa­tion and turnover of custody are duly documented and are perfectly legal and in order."

They added the boy "chose to be with his mother since he barely knows his biological father because the latter abandoned them for 10 years."

On Tuesday, the mother filed complaints against the boy's father and against local police for allegedly coercing the child to be a witness against members of the New People's Army.

Karapatan said it supports the filing of the countercha­rges as well as the formation of the Justice for Sagay Massacre Network.

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