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Philippines
The Philippines pushes for a leading role in the US "war
against terrorism"
By John Roberts
25 November 2002
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In the wake of the Bali bombings on October 12, Philippine
President Gloria Arroyo is aligning her administration even more
closely with Washington and pressing ahead with anti-terrorist
legislation to give the police and military far-reaching powers
to crack down on all forms of opposition.
Two days after the Bali attack, the Arroyo administration announced
that it would take the lead in convening a regional security conference
in Manila on November 8-9. Commenting on the cabinet decision,
Arroyos National Security Adviser Roilo Golez declared:
I think the timings perfect right now, because everybodys
concerned about the Bali incident.
In the course of the conference, Arroyo held a private meeting
with Bushs coordinator for counter-terrorism, Ambassador
Francis Taylor, reporting to him on the delays in passing the
anti-terrorist legislation. After the consultation, she suggested
that Philippine and US police and intelligence officials conduct
joint counter-terrorism exercises.
Arroyo is pushing for the Philippines to play a leading role
in the US war on terrorism in the region. At a summit
of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Phnom
Penh the previous week, she called for closer regional collaboration
between police and intelligence agencies and indicated the Manila
would host a multilateral terrorist response simulation game in
the next two months.
Arroyos promotion of the Philippines as the regional
leader in anti-terrorism serves two purposes: to ingratiate her
administration with the Bush administration and to bolster her
credibility at home in order to deal with the growing opposition.
Over the past year, there have been protests both against the
proposed anti-terrorist laws and the presence, earlier this year,
of US troops in southern Mindanao under the guise of a training
mission.
On November 11, in the immediate aftermath of the regional
security conference, Lieutenant-General Narciso Abaya, who heads
the countrys Southern Command, announced that 300 US troops
would arrive in February to train Filipino troops in counter-terror
methods. The new US troop deployment will concentrate on training
two light reaction companies and four light infantry battalions,
as well as providing Filipino helicopter pilots with night-flying
and intelligence-gathering abilities.
On November 21, Arroyo overrode parliamentary opposition and
signed an agreement with the Bush administration to further strengthen
Philippine-US military ties. The Military Logistics and Support
Agreement (MLSA) will allow the US military to use the Philippines
as a supply base. While both governments have attempted to downplay
the deals significance, the MLSA permits the US military
to establish storage centres for supplies of ammunition, food,
water and fuel, and to set up billeting, transportation, medical
and communications support services.
One of the Bush administrations aims has been to use
the war on terrorism as a means to bolster its military
presence in South East Asia, particularly in the former US colony
of the Philippines, where it was forced to shut its Subic Bay
naval base and the Clark Airfield in the early 1990s. While the
MLSA stops short of allowing the US to reestablish military bases
in the Philippines, it is major step in that direction.
Attacks on democratic rights
As well as signing the MLSA, Arroyo has been seeking to press
ahead with her stalled anti-terrorist laws. There are currently
seven draft bills before the national legislature, which, taken
together, constitute a major assault on democratic rights. Police
will be given increased powers of surveillance and communication
interception, the right to detain suspects without warrants for
72 hours and the power to freeze bank accounts. Those who provide
information to the media about cases related to terrorism will
face fines and jail terms.
The definition of terrorism is so broad that virtually
any political opposition, including strikes and protests by workers,
will be included. As well as the destruction of lives and property,
terrorist acts will include disturbing public peace and
order in order to advance any ideological, political,
religious, ethnic, or cultist belief, or any form of belief espousing
any cause or purpose.
Arroyo has already extended the scope of her anti-terror
campaign from southern Mindanao, where the army has been fighting
a brutal and protracted war against an Islamic-based separatist
organisation, to include the New Peoples Army (NPA), the military
wing of the Stalinist Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP).
The NPA has conducted an ongoing guerrilla war since the late
1960s amid a wave of popular opposition to the Marcos dictatorship.
But no one has linked the NPA or the CPP to Islamic fundamentalist
groups such as Al Qaeda.
In early August, armed forces chief General Roy Cimatu declared
that the growth of the NPA, estimated to have 11,000 fighters,
had become too alarming. He claimed that the number
of rural villages with an NPA presence had grown by 20 percent
since 1995, so that 5.5 percent of all villages were now affected.
Cimatus comments were timed to coincide with a trip to
Washington by Defence Secretary Angelo Reyes to discuss US-Philippine
military relations. More than 1,000 US troops had been in southern
Mindanao over the previous six months as part of a training
exercise aimed at destroying the Islamic fundamentalist
Abu Sayyaf militia. But the previous agreement had expired.
By targetting the NPA, the Arroyo and Bush administrations
established a fresh pretext for continued US military operations
in the Philippines and, moreover, one that would justify the extension
of the war against terrorism beyond southern Mindanao.
While in the US, Reyes announced that half of the $US50 million
in US anti-terrorist aid would be to fight the NPA.
On August 10, the US State Department added both the CPP and
the NPA to its list of foreign terrorist organisations. At the
end of October, following a mission by Philippine Foreign Secretary
Blas Ople, the European Union also designated the NPA as a terrorist
organisation. Ople pressed the EU to expel the CPP founder Jose
Maria Sison, who is currently living in exile in the Netherlands.
While the NPA has been branded as a major threat, the overriding
concern in ruling circles is with the growing hostility to Arroyo
administration being generated by the countrys deepening
social crisis. Unemployment has reached an all-time high of 14
percent and an estimated 40 percent of the population of 80 million
live below the official poverty line.
In a speech on August 6, Arroyo made clear that the new police
powers would be used not only against terrorists and criminals
but against those who terrorise factories that provide jobs.
In other words, the government intends to crack down on striking
trade unionists, protesting workers and, by extension, anyone
who threatens its economic restructuring agenda.
Already the democratic rights of workers are under siege. Since
Arroyo came to power in 2001, the Centre for Trade Union and Human
Rights has listed 226 legal violations, including illegal arrests
and detentions. Over half of the cases were attacks on picket
lines. In the countryside, as the military has stepped up its
offensive against the NPA, 23 members of legal leftwing organisations
have been killed in less than 18 months.
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