Mar 252014
 
President Benigno S. Aquino III converses with PhilHealth president and chief executive officer Alexander Padilla during the Launching of Alaga Ka para sa Maayos na Buhay (ALAGA KA) Program at the Quezon Memorial Circle in Elliptical Road, Quezon City on Monday (March 24, 2014). The Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) and the Department of Health (DOH) leads the simultaneous launching of the program in all 17 regions in order to provide the country’s 14.7 million indigent families with greater access to primary health care services. (Photo by Ryan Lim / Malacañang Photo Bureau)

President Benigno S. Aquino III converses with PhilHealth president and chief executive officer Alexander Padilla during the Launching of Alaga Ka para sa Maayos na Buhay (ALAGA KA) Program at the Quezon Memorial Circle in Elliptical Road, Quezon City on Monday (March 24, 2014). The Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) and the Department of Health (DOH) leads the simultaneous launching of the program in all 17 regions in order to provide the country’s 14.7 million indigent families with greater access to primary health care services. (Photo by Ryan Lim / Malacañang Photo Bureau)

MANILA (Mabuhay) – Justice Secretary Leila de Lima on Monday said the Tiamzon couple cannot use the joint agreement on safety and immunity (JASIG) as their defense because it has no effect on their standing warrants of arrest.

Under JASIG, which was signed by the government and the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF) back in 1995, people participating in the peace talks are immune from arrests.

Benito Tiamzon is the chairman of the CPP-NPA while his wife, Wilma, is the secretary general. They were nabbed by elements of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) in Barangay Zaragosa, Aluginsan in Carcar, Cebu last Saturday.

THE NDF has asserted that the Tiamzon couple is covered by JASIG but the government panel insists otherwise.

Rachel Pastores, lawyer of the Tiamzon couple, said those listed in the JASIG list use aliases as a form of security.

“There is the id to prove that he is the person bearing that alias. The use of an alias is not an issue. This is unfortunate. We are hoping that this coming May, there will be talks and I hope that it will still push through,” the lawyer said.

Malacañang, however, said that while Benito used an alias, the NDF failed to prove his identity thus voiding the agreement.

His wife, meanwhile, jumped bail in December 1989 before the JASIG came into effect, making her ineligible for protection.

De Lima said JASIG is only effective if there are ongoing peace talks, which is not the case.

“The issue on whether or not they are JASIG-covered would not have an effect on the validity of their arrests. These are outstanding warrants of arrest. Their immunity under JASIG…would not apply under the circumstances because it presupposes that there is an ongoing peace negotiation but we don’t see that,” she said.

De Lima also said the couple’s criminal cases have nothing to do with the peace process.

The Tiamzon couple is facing cases of murder, multiple murder and frustrated murder before the regional trial court in Northern Samar.

The arrest of the couple is considered a big blow to the leftist movement. Malacañang said the government is prepared for any retaliatory attack.

“We are always aware, fully aware of the possibility of retaliation, and our Armed Forces are always to defend the population,” Presidential Spokesman Edwin Lacierda said.

The government earlier said the CPP’s armed wing, the NPA, is down to about 4,000 guerrillas from more than 26,000 in the late 1980s.

The rebels frequently ambush or raid small military and police units, as well as extort money from rural businesses, military officials say.

In April last year, President Benigno Aquino’s government announced that the peace talks being brokered by Norway had collapsed, dampening hopes of a political settlement before the president’s six-year term ends in mid-2016.

Manila has since asked Oslo to help the Philippine government convince the rebels to return to the negotiating table. (MNS)

Mar 232014
 
GPH peace panel: Alleged CPP leaders not covered by immunity agreement

The government peace panel on Sunday reiterated there was nothing illegal in the arrest of two alleged leaders of the Communist Party-New People’s Army-National Democratic Front in Cebu on Saturday afternoon.  “The NDF represented by Mr. Luis Jalandoni has protested that the arrest is illegal since both Wilma and Benito are covered by JASIG (Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees). The GPH panel believes otherwise. There has been no violation of the JASIG in these cases,” it said in a statement.  Palace spokesman Edwin Lacierda also explained that since the identities of NDF leaders and consultants covered by the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees has been inaccessible due to a corrupted diskette, it is no longer operative. “Hindi po operative ang JASIG po ngayon dahil nga po hindi ho mabuksan ‘yung files. Matatandaan po ninyo, nasabi na rin po ‘nung binubuksan po ‘yung files ay hindi ho nila mabuksan. Sila po ang nagbigay ng listahan ng JASIG list po. It’s in a diskette, it can no longer be decrypted, so it was not our fault,” Lacierda said in an interview aired over state-run dzRB. The Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process explained that since the names of those on the JASIG list are unknown at the moment, it cannot be verified if Benito Tiamzon was indeed on the list. “The NDF and the GPH agreed to a procedure in July 2011 to verify the true identities of several dozen alleged NDF consultants in the Read More …