Friday, June 5, 2009

Where are Juanito and John?



Dear Readers,

Where are Jaunito Carabeo and John Edward Handoc?

Hayden Kho, Katrini Halili and Bong and Co. sucked the air from this story over the last three weeks. I understand people were obsessed with the 'porngate' scandal, but these 'other' stories tend to be lost in the flurry of sex and oohh ahhhh's. I received a disturbing e mail this morning which prompted me to post this story.

MANILA — An American woman was freed five days after armed and hooded men believed to be military agents abducted her and two companions in a Philippine province north of Manila, her colleagues said Monday.

The woman, Melissa Roxas, 31, an activist from Los Angeles who had been doing volunteer health work in Tarlac Province, was kidnapped on May 19 along with two other health volunteers for a nongovernmental nationalist group called Bayan.

She “surfaced this morning,” said Renato Reyes Jr., secretary general of the group. Mr. Reyes said it was not yet clear why only Ms. Roxas was freed. The fate of the two other workers, Juanito Carabeo and John Edward Handoc, remained unknown.

It was the first time that an American citizen had fallen victim to what Bayan and human rights groups here call “enforced disappearances,” or the abduction of activists by those suspected of being military agents.

Lt. Col. Romeo Brawner Jr., a spokesman for the Philippine military, said the military had received a report on Ms. Roxas’s disappearance but declined to comment. “We are verifying it,” he said.

According to Mr. Reyes, Ms. Roxas and her companions were taken at gunpoint from the village where they were working and shoved into a van that had no license plates. Mr. Reyes could not yet say whether Ms. Roxas had been harmed. He said she was with her family in Manila.

According to the human rights group Karapatan, more than 200 Filipino activists have been kidnapped and never heard from since 2001, the year President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo came to power. Others have turned up dead or showing signs of torture.

Groups like Human Rights Watch have said that activists’ disappearances are part of the government’s counterinsurgency campaign against leftist rebels. The military has consistently denied that charge, calling it propaganda by leftist groups sympathetic to the three-decade-old Communist movement in the Philippines.

But the United Nations Human Rights Council, in a report last year prepared by its special rapporteur, Philip Alston, called on Ms. Arroyo to institute reforms within the military and to investigate thoroughly what Mr. Alston called “credible allegations” that the military was behind most of these killings and abductions.

Eduardo Ermita, Ms. Arroyo’s executive secretary and spokesman, called the rapporteur’s report inaccurate and said Mr. Alston was biased toward leftists.

New York Times, Asia Edition