The Philippine Star

UP refutes claims of infiltrati­on, hits NPA student list

- By JANVIC MATEO

The top official of the University of the Philippine­s (UP) condemned the military’s recent allegation­s that some colleges and offices at the university have knowingly condoned supposed infiltrati­on by communist groups.

UP president Danilo Concepcion said that these charges pose “very real danger” to students, faculty and staff because such assumption­s lack any factual evidence. He reiterated that UP does not condone violence,

terrorism or coercion as a means of political action.

“The UP administra­tion is unaware of and has received no specifics regarding these recent allegation­s and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g them. At worst, these allegation­s pose a very real danger to the lives and safety of our students, faculty, staff and the members of the UP community. These dangers come not only from elements of the military and the police, but also from vigilantes who seek to take justice into their own hands,” he said.

The military made the claim as part of their justificat­ion for the terminatio­n of the 1989 agreement between UP and the Department of National Defense (DND), which prohibits uncoordina­ted entry of the military inside university campuses.

Several UP alumni are considerin­g legal action after the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) released a list of supposed New People’s Army (NPA) members captured or killed during military encounters.

On Friday, a Facebook page named “Armed Forces of the Philippine­s Informatio­n Exchange” published a list of 28 supposed UP alumni who reportedly joined the NPA. While the original post has been taken down, several other pages have picked up the material and have shared it online.

“We want to hold people accountabl­e for this reckless publicatio­n of a list and our malicious inclusion in that list. We’re considerin­g cyber libel and other legal actions,” said Raffy Aquino of the Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG).

In separate statements, former Department of Health (DOH) undersecre­tary and Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) president Alex Padilla, Institute for Social Entreprene­urship in Asia president Marie Liza Dacanay, playwright Liza Magtoto, business journalist Roel Landingin and former environmen­t secretary Elmer Mercado similarly denounced their inclusion in the list.

UP Diliman chancellor Fidel Nemenzo expressed concern over the publicatio­n of the list, saying it sends a message that the entire university is under attack. “After all the millions poured into military intelligen­ce, I do not understand why the only thing they can come up is a list like this,” he said.

No AFP garden

In a separate statement, officials of Barangay UP Campus in Quezon City disputed the AFP’s claims that it maintains an urban gardening project inside the university.

On Jan. 21, a day after the terminatio­n of the agreement was announced, soldiers entered the UP Diliman campus to supposedly visit their urban gardening project.

“Barangay UP Campus has maintained our urban garden project for a number of years now even before this present administra­tion. I am appalled that Barangay UP Campus was used for whatever intention of the AFP to justify their presence within our barangay and for the issue on the abrogation of the UP-DND accord of 1989,” said barangay chairperso­n Zenaida Lectura.

Barangay kagawad Danilo Arceo said the military only donated seedlings for the project but was not involved in the garden’s operations. “Unknowingl­y, some soldiers went inside the garden and put up a marker indicating that it was their project. I learned about it when it was posted by the university and the headlines of the evening news. It never occurred to me that they will use the said visit with the issue of the UP-DND accord abrogation,” he said.

Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) spokesman Undersecre­tary Jonathan Malaya said the department would meet with UP officials this week to review its own agreement that limits police presence in the UP system.

“The non-academic areas in UP have increased through the years and crime has been increasing, thus we need to discuss ways on how we can maintain peace and order in those areas,” Malaya said in a statement. – With Romina Cabrera, Edu Punay

 ?? ANDY ZAPATA JR. ?? UP-Baguio student leaders, faculty and officials yesterday join a rally to protest the unilateral terminatio­n of the accord banning the military inside campuses.
ANDY ZAPATA JR. UP-Baguio student leaders, faculty and officials yesterday join a rally to protest the unilateral terminatio­n of the accord banning the military inside campuses.

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