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3rd petitioner vs martial law: SC must define it

Etta Rosales 鈥擬ARIANNE BERMUDEZ

What really is martial law?

Etta Rosales, former chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights (CHR),聽 on Friday asked the Supreme Court to answer this critical question in a 33-page petition that challenged the constitutional basis for the yearlong extension of military rule in Mindanao.

Rosales鈥 petition was the third legal action brought before the high court that questioned President Duterte鈥檚 decision to extend martial law in Mindanao until Dec. 31.

鈥淭he basic problem with the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court right now is that (it has) allowed the President to exercise martial law powers, but (the magistrates) have not defined what martial law is all about,鈥 said Rosales鈥 counsel, former Solicitor General Florin Hilbay.

鈥淎nd because (the high court) has not defined martial law, you have these (questions) on what the President can do, what the military can do,聽 and the real purpose of martial law,鈥 Hilbay added.

The Palace 鈥渨elcome(s) the filing of the suit because that is also a right of any citizen under the 1987 Constitution,鈥 presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said in a press briefing in Malaybalay City on Friday.

Legal, factual basis

But the President鈥檚 decision to extend martial law for a year 鈥渆njoys an overwhelming presumption of constitutionality, given that both the executive and the legislative branches of government have found both legal and factual basis for (it),鈥 Roque said.

In asking the magistrates to void the extension of martial law in Mindanao, Rosales said the high court had already ruled that the President鈥檚 鈥渆xtraordinary power to declare martial law may be exercised only when there is actual invasion or rebellion and public safety requires it.鈥

鈥淭his is so because martial law is the law for the theater of war, where there is a need to supplant or supplement civilian law with military law,鈥 Rosales said.

The former CHR chair also disputed claims that Mindanao residents welcomed the President鈥檚 extension of martial law even after the military had ended the five-month occupation of Marawi City by the Islamic State-allied Maute terror group.

In fact, Rosales said, a recent survey showed that more than 60 percent of Filipinos were not supportive of Mr. Duterte鈥檚 Proclamation No. 216, which placed Mindanao under military rule and suspended the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.

Hilbay meanwhile sought the tribunal鈥檚 permission for him to participate in the oral arguments next week on the two similar petitions filed by opposition lawmakers and members of the Makabayan bloc.

Separate petitions

Earlier, Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman and militant lawmakers filed separate petitions questioning the legal basis for the extension of martial law.

In its petition, the Makabayan bloc accused Mr. Duterte, Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, and Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III of 鈥渉av(ing) entered into an unholy alliance鈥 by 鈥減eddling imagined fears of the persistence of enemies (that) the government had claimed to have already vanquished.鈥

The government itself, said petitioner Carlos Zarate of the Bayan Muna party-list group, had admitted that the Maute group was already on the run.

The irony, Zarate said, was that when the battle in Marawi was raging, Congress only extended martial law for five months.

鈥淣ow that the battle in Marawi was over, Congress extends (martial law) by one year. This is absurd,鈥 he said. 鈥擶ITH A REPORT FROM ALLAN NAWAL

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