BAGUIO CITY鈥擳he first legal challenge to the Anti-Terrorism Council鈥檚 (ATC) power to designate terrorists was filed before a Baguio court on Thursday by four indigenous Filipino activists, who said the government deprived them of due process and had subsequently punished their families when it froze their assets.
The ATC issued Resolution No. 41 in June declaring Windel Bolinget, Steven Tauli, Jennifer Awingan-Taggaoa and Sara Abellon-Alikes as terrorists, without formally notifying them. They learned about the ATC ruling when banks notified them in July that their accounts were frozen by the Anti-Money Laundering Council.
Accompanied by lawyers Antonio La Vi帽a and Carlos Isagani Zarate, Bolinget and the three activists asked the court to remove them from the government鈥檚 terror roster through a petition for certiorari and prohibition on the grounds that the ATC had 鈥済ravely abused its discretion.鈥
Zarate, a former Bayan Muna party list representative, said the Baguio lawsuit would address the constitutionality of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020 (Republic Act No. 11479), as well as the methods imposed to determine whether individuals subscribe to the ATC鈥檚 definition of a terrorist or terror groups.
The petition asks the court to determine if Bolinget and the three other Cordillerans had 鈥渟uffered injury鈥 because of ATC Resolution No. 41 and to decide whether RA 11479 鈥渇ails to comply with the due process requirement, violates the rights to free speech and its cognate (similar) rights, as well as the principle of the separation of powers.鈥
Arbitrary
By linking the activists to unsubstantiated terror activities and associations, the actions of the ATC, led by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin, were both 鈥渁rbitrary and unconstitutional,鈥 according to the petition drawn up by La Vi帽a, Zarate and lead counsel Jose Molintas, a Baguio councilor.
鈥淭his power to designate [terrorists in RA 11479] 鈥 does not expressly provide [legal and procedural] standards that must be observed,鈥 the petition argues, adding that the law鈥檚 grievance mechanism was also ambiguous.
鈥淧etitioners were condemned without meticulous regard for the decencies of a fair trial 鈥 and have no recourse to any proper procedural safeguards and remedies for an erroneous designation. In the first place, they are prohibited from accessing whatever classified evidence damning them to be judged as having met the 鈥榬equirements for designation,鈥欌 the activists said in their petition.
They said the law鈥檚 process for delisting a designated terrorist, which is outlined in its internal rules and regulations 鈥渋s illusory,鈥 because 鈥渙ther than mistaken identity and death, the criteria for delisting 鈥 constrains the [designated terrorist] to virtually admit the circumstances that led to their destination.鈥
IPs most vulnerable
鈥淲orse, they are already made to suffer the consequences of being a designated [terrorist] and no recourse is provided [by the law] to challenge the factual basis of their designation,鈥 the petition stressed.
Bolinget, chair of the Baguio-based Cordillera Peoples鈥 Alliance (CPA), said they pursued all remedies prescribed by the law before filing the petition.
鈥淲e filed two successive appeals asking the ATC to remove our terrorist tags but it dismissed our petitions,鈥 he told the Inquirer.
Three months ago, when CPA celebrated World Indigenous Peoples鈥 (IPs) Day on Aug. 9, La Vi帽a said, 鈥淚 take this [the terror designation of the CPA activists] personally.鈥
He was one of the lawyers who questioned the constitutionality of RA 11479 before the Supreme Court after it was signed into law by then President Rodrigo Duterte.
鈥淎n antiterror law鈥攚e argued鈥攊s most dangerous to the indigenous peoples,鈥 La Vi帽a had said in August, because indigenous communities were at the front lines living on ancestral lands rich in natural resources.
Bolinget is of Kankana-ey and Bontoc (Mountain Province) descent, who has been charged several times for rebellion for which he was acquitted by the courts. The nature of these government lawsuits 鈥渞eveal that these charges were fabricated, baseless and were filed to harass the petitioners,鈥 the petition says.
Like Bolinget, Alikes and Tauli (brother of former United Nations special rapporteur on indigenous peoples鈥 affairs Victoria Tauli-Corpuz) also belong to the Kankana-ey IP group who were charged or Red-tagged as communist rebels, while Taggaoa is a member of the Kalinga tribes of Limos and Poswoy who was also subjected to criminal complaints.
鈥淲e should all be alarmed because in the eyes of the state, indigenous peoples鈥 voices fighting for the rights to land and self-determination is terrorism,鈥 said Katribu convener Beverly Longid.
When RA 11479 was being discussed in Congress, their sponsors said they would ensure the law would not be weaponized against dissenters, according to former lawmaker and Sandugo spokesperson Eufemia Cullamat.
鈥淏ut this is now the direct result of that power,鈥 she added. 鈥擶ITH A REPORT FROM KRIXIA SUBINGSUBING