Sunday, April 3, 2011

OUR PROPHETIC VOICES (Official Statements and Inputs from Church People and Other Sectors on Urgent Issues of the Day)


Beautiful are the feet of those who love peace ……
The National Council of Churches in the Philippines expresses elation over the successful formal peace talks between the Government of the Philippines (GPH) and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) in Oslo, Norway from February 15-21, 2011.  We congratulate both panels for the agreements reached as contained in their Joint Statement. We are jubilant on the note of optimism that the statement projects.  We thank the Royal Norwegian Government for its unequivocal role as facilitator of the peace process and for their hospitality to all those directly involved with the peace talks from the Philippines.
Specifically, the NCCP is edified that both Panels “recognized the need to resume the formal peace negotiations in order to resolve the armed conflict by addressing its root causes.”  For too long, this has been the cry of justice and peace advocates as it was the cry of the church.  This recognition puts to the fore of the peace talks the situations of the vast majority of the Filipino people.  It is a declaration that the peace talks is for the people more than anything else.  We take pride in this particular statement of both Panels.
We also rejoice that both Parties agreed to uphold all previous agreements so painstakingly crafted in the past.  We support the statement that these are “essential and unilateral affirmations in moving ahead and forging agreements on the remaining substantive agenda…”.  We commend both Panels for setting up timeframes, for the work of the reciprocal working groups, and the equally important work of the Joint Monitoring Committee.  We are encouraged as well by the forward-looking stance that the statement conveys.  We lift all these efforts to God who loves all people and desires that not one be lost.  Indeed, how beautiful are the feet of those who decide peace and salvation (cf. Isaiah 12.7)!
We look forward to the meetings of the Panels in the forthcoming months and assure them that the NCCP will continue to pray for the success of the peace talks and their continuing good health, each and severally.  With vibrant hope, we urge all Filipinos, especially the constituency of the NCCP to be vigilant that we all remain focused on the way of justice and peace.  We invite one and all to be of one mind in appreciating the issues that would lead to just and lasting peace.  Let us be vigilant that no one or any group derail the peace process that it may draw ever closer towards a successful end.  We owe that much to the future generations of this country.  Above all, let us continue thanking God “for setting us at tasks which demand our best efforts, and for leading us to accomplishments which satisfy and delight us” (BCP).
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(SGD) Rev. Fr. Rex R.B. Reyes, Jr.
General Secretary – NCCP
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(SGD) Bishop Nathanael P. Lazaro
Chairperson




OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT OF THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA HU JINTAO

With hope still raised high, we humbly, sincerely and desperately appeal to Your Excellency that the Chinese Government spare the lives of our loved ones, Sally Ordinario-Villanueva, Elizabeth Batain and Ramon Credo, Filipino nationals convicted in your country for drug offense and sentenced to die by lethal injection on March 30.
We are profoundly grateful that the Chinese Government granted a temporary stay of their execution last February upon the representation of Vice President Jejomar Binay.
We earnestly beg Your Excellency for commutation.  We believe our loved ones are victims of larger drug syndicates who take advantage of the unawareness, vulnerability and desperation of our people.  We are pained that they are meted the death penalty while the big true drug operators and syndicates go on wild abandon.
Our appeal is thus an appeal for compassion.  None would be happiest than the two children of Sally Ordinario-Villanueva, both honor students and the four-year old son of Ramon.  These children have not seen their mother and father, respectively.
Please listen to our plea and be the instrument for the extension of the lives of these three people.
Our hope and prayers are with Sally, Elizabeth and Ramon and for a just and compassionate world.
(Sgd.),
Marisol Ordinario, sister of Sally Ordinario
Sol Credo, wife of Ramon Credo
Fr. REX RB. REYES, JR. 
General Secretary, National Council of Churches in the Philippines
Bro. Eddie Villanueva
Jesus Is Lord Movement
Bishop SOLITO K. TOQUERO
Co-Chairperson, Ecumenical Bishops’ Forum
Bishop NATHANAEL LAZARO
Chairperson, NCCP, General Superintendent – IEMELIF (Iglesia Evangelica Metodista en Las Islas Filipinas)
Ms. NORMA O. DOLLAGA
Secretary General, KASIMBAYAN (Ecumenical Center for Development)
MR. NARDY SABINO
Secretary General, Promotion of Church People’s Response
Garry Martinez 
Chairperson, Migrante International
Lana Linaban 
Secretary-General, Gabriela
Renato Reyes, Jr 
Secretary-General, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN)
Save the Lives of OFWs on Death Row Alliance

RELIGION

Ronalyn V. Olea ; March 18, 2011; Bulatlat.com 
MANILA – Human rights groups in the Philippines filed a complaint against the Philippine government for the killing of botanist Leonard Co and two others before the United Nations, March 14. The groups also called the attention of the international community on the ongoing trial of the Maguindanao massacre and continuing human rights violations under the new administration.
Co, Sofronio Cortez and Julius Borromeo were killed on November 15, 2010 while conducting a research inside the Energy Development Corporation (EDC) compound in Kananga, Leyte. A survivor, Ronino Gibe and other witnesses pointed to the elements of the 19th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army as perpetrators [2].
Members of the Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines (Ecumenical Voice) handed over the complaint of scientist group Agham (not the party list) to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions Christof Heyns. Co was a member of Agham. The group also submitted a copy of the report [3] of an independent fact finding mission on the incident.
Agham urged Heyns to investigate the killing of Co, Cortez and Borromeo, “up to and including all levels of the military command concerned with their shooting.” The families of the victims and their supporters have expressed fear of a possible whitewash with the report of the Department of Justice [4] and National Bureau of Investigation clearing the military of any responsibility.
According to Karapatan, the killings of Co, Cortez and Borromeo were among the first 30 cases of extrajudicial killings committed under the administration of President Benigno Aquino III.
Members of the Ecumenical Voice went to Geneva, Switzerland for the 16th session of the United National Human Rights Council. The delegation is headed by Philippine Independent Church Bishop Bishop Felixberto Calang and Marie Hilao Enriquez, Karapatan chairwoman.
Maguindanao Massacre, Mindanao Killings
In an oral statement, Calang, also of the Initiatives for Peace in Mindanao (InPeace Mindanao), highlighted the “slow pace of the trial on the Maguindanao massacre” and cases of extrajudicial killings in Mindanao.
Calang expressed concern over the conduct of the prosecution in the Maguindanao massacre. The massacre of November 23, 2009 claimed the lives of 58 individuals, including 32 journalists and two lawyers. Members of an alleged warlord political family in Maguindanao province are suspected to be the perpetrators.
“The victims’ kin are apprehensive of attempts to bribe witnesses and prosecutors in apparent moves to weaken the ongoing legal case against the powerful Ampatuan family. The victims’ families complain of the slow pace of the judicial processes while witnesses remain unprotected and some have already been killed,” Calang said.
Calang called on the UN Human Rights Council to monitor the prosecution of the accused in the Maguindanao massacre. He also urged the international community to call for the adequate protection of witnesses and for a speedy and public trial of the case.
Calang’s statement was read by Ephraim Cortez of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL) during the general debate on Item 3 at the 16th session of the UN Human Rights Council.
Calang also said that of the 1,206 documented cases of extrajudicial killings in the Philippines under former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, 375 of the victims were from Mindanao. He cited the recent murder of B’laan chieftain Rudy Dejos [5] and his son Rody Rick in Sta. Cruz, Davao del Sur and the killing of Benjamin Bayles [6] , a member of the Philippine Independent Church. Calang said the incidents “show that extrajudicial killings continue under the prevailing climate of impunity in the country.”
Other members of the Ecumenical Voice are Dr. Merry Mia Clamor, one of the Morong 43, Cristina Palabay of Karapatan; Girlie Padilla of the Ecumenical Movement for Justice and Peace and Rhonda Ramiro of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan-USA chapter.

PEACE

Mindanao People’s Peace Agenda gains more support; 

Mindanao Bishops take lead



 
Bishop Felixberto Calang of Iglesida FIlipina Independiente MOBUCA Diocese signs the Manifesto of Sowing the Seeds of Peace, endorsing the Mindanao Peoples' Peace Agenda to the GPH and NDF peace panels.  Beside him is UCCP BIshop Melzar Labuntog of Northwest Mindanao and Bishop Modesto Villasanta of Southeastern Mindanao. 
More people from a cross-section of sectors in Mindanao led by clergy, local government officials, and peace advocates signed a manifesto endorsing the Mindanao People’s Peace Agenda, a document that brought in proposals on socio-economic reforms that they want to be addressed in the peace talks between the Philippine government and the National Democratic Front (NDF).

“The Manifesto is a breathing testament of the people’s resolve to be part of the work of achieving much-desired peace,” United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) Bishop Labuntog, co-convenor of the movement, Sowing the Seeds of Peace said.

The manifesto, Bishop Labuntog pointed out, expresses the commitment of interfaith groups, multi-sectoral stakeholders and political leaders to continue in the work of widening the people’s participation on the peace process.
The Mindanao People’s Peace Agenda which was crafted during a consultative workshop attended by more than 200 last February in Davao City calls for immediate reforms on land, labor, social service, education, and people-oriented development. 

Bishop Labuntog said they will be holding more multi-sectoral consultations so they may be able to continue sending proposal to both panels in the peace process in the run-up to June, the month when the reciprocal working committees of both parties in the Oslo peace talks shall sit down again to discuss on the socio-economic reforms agenda.

Quoting the manifesto, Bishop Labuntog said, this is their way of sowing the seeds of peace. “With continued dialogue, we are hopeful that our people will reap the harvest of peace that is anchored on social justice, a peace that is liberating and lasting for future generations.”

 
Bukidnon Vice Governor Jose Ma. Zubiri throws support to the Mindanao Peoples' Peace Agenda presented during the Gathering for Peace in Cagayan de Oro.  Zubiri admitted that
armed conflict in the countryside will never cease unless real land reform is implemented.
 
The manifesto has gathered 250 signatures since it was presented at the Cagayan de Oro City forum last March 1. The signatures include those of local chief executives of Cagayan de Oro and Davao City, and Bukidnon Vice-Governor Jose Maria Zubiri.

Eight Mindanao bishops have taken the lead in getting more support to the manifesto. They are Archbishop Antonio Ledesma of the Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro and Co-Chair of the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform, Bishop Felixberto Calang of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI) and chair of Initiatives for Peace in Mindanao. 

Other prelates who were among the first to sign the manifesto include United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) Bishop Melzar Labuntog of Ecumenical Bishops Forum (EBF), IFI Bishop Rhee Timbang, Chairperson of the IFI Mindanao Bishops Council, UCCP Bishop Modesto Villasanta of the Southeastern Mindanao Jurisdiction, IFI Bishop Delfin Callao, Jr. of Exodus for Justice and Peace (EJP) and UCCP Bishop Osias Jaim.

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Church and multi-sectoral leaders of the Sowing the Seeds of Peace Movement gather at a prayer rally in front of Cagayan de Oro City's Pelaez Sports Complex at Velez Street, calling for the sustaining of peace talks in pursuit of socio-economic reforms and just and lasting peace 
They are also joined in by priests from various prelatures, as well as representatives of clergy organizations, among others the Social Action Center, and the association of women religious, Sisters’ Association in Mindanao (SAMIN).

The religious from various congregational orders, such as the Missionary Sisters of Mary, Religious of the Good Shepherd and the Assumption Sisters are among the first to join the signature drive.
Members of the academe, non-government organizations working for the indigenous peoples and the Moro, and representatives of sectoral organizations, the peasants, workers, the youth and the professionals have also signed the document.








Gov’t negotiator: PH communism on the ‘brink of extinction’ 
By Jeffrey M. Tupas, Dennis Jay Santos
Inquirer Mindanao; 
03/19/2011



The National Democratic Front should forge a peace agreement with the government within the three-year time frame for the negotiations or it may not have another chance again, the government’s chief negotiator said Friday.

Alex Padilla said the NDF must grab the opportunity to “come to terms” with the government because time was running out.

He said the communist ideology was on the “brink of extinction.”

“Now is the best time. There will be no other opportunity than today…than within the next months. They have to come to terms for a peaceful negotiated settlement,” he said during a visit here in connection with the peace process.

Padilla said something good must be achieved within the three-year period, during which the government “will implement all three signed agreements.”

These were the socio-economic reforms, political and constitutional reforms, and the agreement to end the hostilities and disposition of forces.

The 42-year insurgency being waged by the Communist Party of the Philippines has become one of the world’s longest-running communist revolutions.

For the past 24 years, the government and the communist rebels have been talking peace.
During this period, the talks stalled several times but 10 agreements have been reached.

But CPP founding chair Jose Maria Sison told the Philippine Daily Inquirer in an email it was the government that should “come to terms with the patriotic and progressive demands of the people in order to make a just and lasting peace with the NDFP.”

“The people and revolutionary forces are convinced that if they continue their revolutionary struggle they have a chance of winning the national democratic revolution or making way for an anti-imperialist and democratic government of national unity, reconciliation and industrial development,” he said.

Sison also hit the government for setting the three-year time frame for the negotiations.
“It is self-contradictory for the GPH to be setting what amounts to an ultimatum while putting up obstacles like attacking The Hague Joint Declaration as a document of perpetual division, preconditioning and negating the peace negotiations with a demand for the capitulation and pacification of the revolutionary forces and preconditioning every meeting of the panels and sub-panels with a ceasefire,” he said.

Padilla admitted that the government wanted a ceasefire while the talks were on.
He said it would be ridiculous to talk while forces on the ground are shooting at each other.
“If GPH is in a hurry to end the shooting war, why does it not agree with the proposal of the NDFP for a concise agreement for an immediate just peace, without prejudice to the peace negotiations?” Sison said.

The concise agreement, he said, is a declaration of principles to “establish a common ground and justify an alliance or partnership and truce of indefinite duration in order to complete the people's struggle for national independence, democracy, industrial development and social justice.”

In Southern Mindanao, the New People’s Army admitted it recently staged coordinated strikes against government positions.

Rigoberto Sanchez, spokesperson of the Merardo Arce Command, said a total of 25 soldiers and government combatants were killed during the assaults in Compostela Valley, Davao del Norte, Davao del Sur and Davao Oriental from March 9 to 15.

But Lieutenant Colonel Lyndon Paniza, spokesperson of the 10th Infantry Division based in Davao City, said while it was correct that clashes took place March 9-15, only one soldier died and that was as a result of a landmine in Compostela Valley.

He said the military has killed several rebels but “we don't boast about the number of casualties because we don't want to treat them (NPA) as enemies.”

Paniza said despite the NPA-initiated attacks, the military was steadfast in its commitment for peace by helping bring development programs to the countryside.

HUMAN RIGHTS

March 06, 2011
Kristine L. Alave; 
Agence France-Presse

MANILA, Philippines – Left-wing umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan urged Lieutenant General Eduardo Oban, the new chief of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, to put a stop to the extrajudicial killings of political activists in the country.
Bayan secretary-general Renato Reyes Jr. said the killings of leftist activists that peaked during the presidency of now Pampanga Representative Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, continues up to this day. Since President Aquino assumed office on June 30, 2010, 40 activists have been killed, he said.

Left-wing activists believe the military is behind the killings. The AFP has denied the allegation.
“President Aquino must give clear and unequivocal orders to General Oban to stop the recent wave of extrajudicial killings. Human rights violations have continued from the Arroyo regime to the Aquino administration. Unfortunately, it does not get much attention from the president, unlike say, corruption in the military,” he said.

“The new chief of staff will be the chief operating officer of the internal security plan Bayanihan. He will be the chief implementer of the counter-insurgency program that continues to target unarmed activists,” Reyes added. ’

Aquino named Oban as the chief of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines on Sunday. Oban, who comes from the Philippine Air Force, will replace General Ricardo David who is retiring on March 8. He will be the 42nd chief of the staff of the AFP.

Reyes said the Aquino government and the military should also stop the murders of political dissidents aside from cleaning the AFP of corruption.

Former AFP officials are currently being investigated by Congress for anomalous disbursements and allowances in the past.

Oban, he said, has attained the power to investigate the extrajudicial killings that claimed hundreds of lives. ’

“We’d like to see Aquino and the new chief of staff investigate human rights abuses in the same way they are investigating corruption of the AFP. We’d like to see the same attention from the executive and legislative branches given to the cases of enforced disappearances and torture, which continue till this day. We’d like to see the Senate investigate generals who have been implicated in extrajudicial killings then and now,” Reyes said.’

Citing information from the human rights group, Karapatan, Reyes said the latest victims of extrajudicial killings include Bayan Muna activist Rodel Estrellado of Barangay 3, Malilipot, Albay and B’laan tribal chief Rudy Dejos and his son Rody Rick Dejos of Barangay Zone-1, Sta. Cruz, Davao del Sur.

Estrallado was abducted near his house on February 25 and later found at a funeral home on Febraury 27. Earlier, the military reported that a certain “Elmer” Estrallado was killed on February 25 in an encounter with the AFP.


March 03, 2011
Edwin Fernandez; 
Inquirer Mindanao

COTABATO CITY, Philippines – The Moro Islamic Liberation Front wants to know if Moros who suffered under the Marcos regime are also entitled to compensation.
Khaled Musa, MILF deputy information chief, said this question cropped up in the wake of the distribution of $7.5 million in compensation to more than 1,000 individuals who filed a class suit against the Marcoses.

“Are Muslims who were massacred during the Marcos regime also entitled to compensation?” Musa asked.

The MILF claims that thousands of Moros were killed in massacres perpetrated by soldiers and state-sponsored paramilitary forces during martial law.

These included the Manili Massacre, Kauswagan Massacre, Tictapul Massacre, Malisbong Massacre, Patikul Massacre and Pata Island Massacre.

Musa said the irony was that the victims of excesses under the Marcos regime will never be able to sue.
“They have not filed their petitions, they are dead and therefore they cannot expect something forthcoming,” he said.

Musa said relatives of the victims have not filed petitions because they lacked access or were “not educated enough” to do so.

Musa said the government or Judge Manuel Real of the US District Court of Hawaii, who approved the distribution of the compensation, could best answer the question of whether or not Moro victims were entitled to it.

He also called on the government to do something in behalf of the massacre victims “in the spirit of justice and reconciliation.”


Urban poor leader shot dead

CBCP Online; Noel Sales Barcelona

A leader of a Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap (The Unity for the Welfare of the Poor/Kadamay)-affiliate organization in Navotas City was shot dead by unknown assassins, March 16.
The victim was identified as Antonio "Nono" Homo, 47, a resident of Kadiwa, Barangay San Roque, and currently the president of the Nagkakaisang Samahan sa Kadiwa (NASAKA), an urban poor organization affiliated with Kadamay.
According to the Kadamay-Navotas spokesperson Arthur Cadungon, the victim was chatting with one of his neighbors when he was shot by unknown suspects. Cadungon connects the killing to the escalating campaign of NASAKA against the planned demolition of shanties in the area to give way to the city government's road widening and housing projects.
As of this writing, there were no statements issued by the Navotas City Government, about the killing.
Kadamay asked President Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III to act swiftly against extrajudicial or political killings.
The group also urged the chief executive to stop demolishing urban poor communities that usually result to senseless violence, and at this point, killing of militant leaders. 


By Nikko Dizon; Philippine Daily Inquirer03/25/2011
Justice Secretary Leila de Lima admitted Friday that the government was faced with some difficulty in solving the murders of media personalities given that motives for the killings may not even be related to their work as journalists.

“We can admit to a certain extent that we are having a difficult time with the media killings but of course we have to dispute anybody who says that we are not doing anything because we are doing something about it,” De Lima told reporters.

De Lima said it was for this reason that the murder of public service broadcaster Marlina “Len” Flores-Sumera was immediately referred for investigation to the justice department’s task force on extra-legal and media killings headed by Justice Undersecretary Francisco Baraan III.
In a statement on Friday, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) criticized what it described as the failure of President Benigno Aquino III to pursue justice for slain journalists.

CPJ noted that the killing of Sumera, 45, happened on the sixth anniversary of the murder of journalist Marlene Esperat, who was shot in front of her children inside their home in Sultan Kudarat on March 24, 2005.

“Six years to the day after Marlene Garcia-Esperat was shot and killed, Maria Len Flores Sumera’s death serves as a tragic reminder that Philippine journalists are still at risk, and that President Benigno Aquino is failing to push for justice for their slain colleagues,” Bob Dietz, CPJ Asia program coordinator, said in a press statement.

“Manila police must immediately respond to this murder and investigate whether Sumera was killed for her work. But beyond that, it is Aquino’s responsibility to reverse the entrenched climate of impunity which allows these murders to continue,” Dietz said.

The Philippines is third on CPJ's impunity index in 2010, “making it one of the worst nations in the world in combating deadly anti-press violence.” (CPJ’s statement explained that its index calculates unsolved journalist murders as a percentage of a country's population.)

De Lima said that compared to the extra-legal murders of activists or leftist supporters, it was more difficult to solve media killings because of the various motives that could range from political to personal or work-related.

She noted that motives for several media killings turned out to be personal.

“But whatever is the motive, it's still killing. And when you target a media personality, that is really bad for any society — that is killing the messenger,” De Lima said.


By Leila B. Salaverria; Philippine Daily InquirerFirst Posted 17:31:00 03/19/2011
The authorities should investigate the acts of torture carried out by men clad in battle fatigues on a group of half-naked men, as shown in a video uploaded on the video-sharing site YouTube, the militant group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan said Saturday.

A group calling itself ISNAYP claims to have posted the video, and alleges that the men doing the whipping and hitting were members of the Philippine Army's 9th Infantry Division.
In the introduction to the video, ISNAYP claimed that the footage showed part of the month-long training of Army recruits in the Bicol Region.

A group of dismayed soldiers of the division, which is based in Pili, Camarines Sur, supposedly sent the video to the National Democratic Front in Bicol to protest the abuse committed against the recruits. The soldiers said that the acts were supposed to prepare the recruits in the event they captured by the New People's Army.

But the introduction also tried to present a sympathetic picture of the NPA, claiming that the communist rebels treated their prisoners humanely and adhered to international humanitarian law.

The video showed a group of men in olive-green shirts and pants and black boots whipping and hitting several men in succession.

The men that were being hit were clad only in dark shorts and made to kneel in front of a man seated on a plastic chair. They were being hit while apparently being asked questions.
One of the half-naked men kept on screaming, “Hindi ko alam (I don't know),” as he doubled over in pain each time his back was slapped with whips and a belt. One of the fatigue-clad men clamped the man's head between his feet.

Another man was repeatedly hit with a belt as he rolled in the mud.

Men could be heard laughing in the video. In the background other half-naked men could be seen lying face-down on the ground.

Bayan said the events shown in the video should be investigated, and added that it cast doubt on the professionalism of the AFP.

“Are these training methods actually sanctioned by the AFP? Is this how recruits are prepared by the institution, through inhumane and degrading treatment? Would not these methods also encourage soldiers to commit torture which is a serious human rights violation?” Bayan secretary general Renato Reyes, Jr. said in a statement.

He said that soldiers should come forward to expose any abhorrent practices in the military.
The men in the video should also be identified and made to explain their actions, he said.
“The AFP should be teaching human rights and not torture methods,” he said.


By Katherine Evangelista; INQUIRER.net03/22/2011

Major Harry Baliaga, primary suspect behind the abduction of militant leader Jonas Burgos, has been removed from his position and reassigned to the Philippine Army headquarters while he is facing investigation by the Commission on Human Rights, a military spokesman said Tuesday.
In an interview, Armed Forces of the Philippines spokesman Brigadier General Jose Mabanta said that the order came from Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Eduardo Oban. Baliaga, who was formerly assigned to the Special Forces Detached Service, will temporarily stay at the holding center at the Philippine Army headquarters in Fort Bonifacio.

"He is relieved of all his duties so that he will be able to concentrate on the cases that may be filed against him in connection with the CHR recommendation," Mabanta said.

He added that the military was seriously viewing this case and that the Armed Forces' Technical Working Group would also determine whether other military commanders are also liable for the abduction of Burgos.

"We'll leave no stones unturned," Mabanta said.

Burgos has been missing since April 2007 after being abducted at a mall in Quezon City. The victim's family accused the military of abducting Burgos after the get-away vehicle allegedly used for the kidnapping was found inside the compound of the 56th Infantry Battalion in Bulacan.