| CPA Statement on  James Balao’s  731st Day of  Enforced Disappearanceand Martial Law  Commemoration on September 21:
 This day marks 731 days or two years of CPA founding member  James Balao’s enforced disappearance. The CPA and the Balao Family sincerely  thanks all organizations and individuals who helped in the search and campaign to  surface James in the past 2 years, from the local to international communities.  Such support and solidarity continue to be sources of strength for the Balao  Family and the CPA. For this, we are indebted.  Today, however, we do not only count the number of days of  James’ enforced disappearance. It was also a long period of injustice and State  terrorism, similar to the Martial Law period under the US-Marcos dictatorship.   We count the number of days until the new  government under Pres. Benigno Aquino III acts on the cases of extrajudicial  killings and enforced disappearances  of  innocent civilians during the past regime of the US-backed Gloria Arroyo,  including the latest cases that took place in Aquino’s first weeks in  office.  We count the number of days  until those accountable for over 1,000 cases of extrajudicial killings and  over 200  cases of enforced disappearance are brought to  the bar of justice. This includes Gloria Arroyo as the Commander in Chief of  the Armed Forces during her term. Until now, we demand justice be served for Markus  Bangit, Jose Doton, Pepe Manegdeg, Albert Terredaño, Alyce Claver and other  slain indigenous leaders and community members in the Cordillera under the  Arroyo regime. And on the nearing commemoration of Martial Law on September 21,  we count the number of days until the new president decisively shows political  will to stop the killings and ensure that justice be served to the  victims.    The CPA iterates its Indigenous Peoples Agenda, duly  submitted to the Office of the President in Malacañang on the occasion of the  International Day of the World’s indigenous peoples in August, which contains  the basic demands and urgent concerns of indigenous peoples in the country for  the recognition of our individual and collective human rights. Among our calls  is the end to militarization and ethnocide in the Cordillera and the immediate  surfacing of James.  A Life and Death  Situation for Indigenous Peoples: Heightened Human Rights Violations and  Ethnocide under the US-Aquino II Regime
 The Cordillera remains one of the most militarized regions  in the country. Under the 5th Infantry Division, the 501st  Brigade (BDE)  continues to operate in  Kalinga and Apayao on top of the regular operations of the 21st  and 77th Infantry Battalions in  Kalinga province. The 502nd BDE operates in Mt. Province  and Ifugao and heads the Task Force Montañosa, while the 503rd BDE  operates in operates in Abra and parts of Benguet. A brigade is usually  composed of 1,200-1,500 soldiers.
 Militarization is manifested thru massive and intense military  operations resulting in various rights violations; setting  up of detachments inside communities including  the dap-ay,  camping inside residential houses, imposing  curfews, instilling fear and terror in the communities and of recent, forests  were burned in Mountain   Province and Abra so as  to prevent NPA’s forest cover. The condemned multimedia presentation Knowing Thy Enemy, which unjustly brands  progressive organizations as terrorists,  continues to be showed in communities and  schools. In fact, the Cordillera was declared a priority region for the  implementation of the AFP’s counter-insurgency Oplan Bantay Laya II targeting civilians,  deploying military troops in areas believed to be strongholds of the  revolutionary New People’s Army and at the same time in areas where there is  community opposition to the entry of   transnational and corporate mining and other extractive industries. At  the start of 2010, massive military operations were conducted in Kalinga  and Abra which are areas targeted for  transnational mining projects. The CPA also condemns the AFP’s plan to form IP squads as  paramilitary forces under the guise of fulfilling its United Nations  obligations on indigenous peoples’ rights. It is simply creating a new  paramilitary terrorist squad under a new name which will prolong the culture of  impunity instead of seriously ending the killing of civilians and reign of  terror as in the recent US-backed Arroyo regime and the US-Marcos Dictatorship.  With this, we will experience anew the same situation when the Cordillera  Peoples Liberation Army (CPLA) was formed and coddled, before its integration  into the Armed Forces, during former president Cory Aquino’s term, mother of  the current president Noynoy Aquino. This move basically exonerated the CPLA from  their crimes against Cordillera indigenous peoples, the extrajudicial killings  of CPA leaders, terrorism in the Cordillera communities, among others.  Government should heed instead the  recommendations from UN Special Rapporteur Rodolfo Stavenhagen’s report to  demilitarize indigenous communities and dismantle paramilitary forces, UN  Special Rapporteur Philip Alston’s recommendation calling for the scrapping of  the Oplan Bantay Laya and the dismantling of the Inter-Agency Legal Action  Group (IALAG), and the  UN Committee on  the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (UNCERD) recommendations for  indigenous peoples of the Philippines to fully enjoy their rights to their  resources; to Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) and  the implementation of a comprehensive law that  will eliminate discrimination based on race, color, decent or ethnic origin.  We continue to condemn and oppose the plunder and  exploitation of our ancestral lands by foreign and local capitalists, and by  the State which continues to promote indigenous territories as resource base  for imperialist plunder and  capitalist  exploitation. In the Cordillera alone, mining applications increased this year,  such as in Mountain Province (Cordillera Exploration-Anglo American), Abra  (Jabel Corporation, Discovery Mines)   Kalinga (Makilala and Phelps Dodge), and Benguet (Brazilian mining giant  Vale, Solfotara). Currently, 66% of the Cordillera’s land area is covered by  various mining applications, on top of the existing large mining operations  like Lepanto, Philex and Benguet Corporation in Benguet. More lands plundered  and exploited only spell disaster for the Cordillera indigenous peoples, who  also face the twin evils of extractive industries and the impact of climate  change.  Intensified militarization and development aggression in  the Cordillera results in ethnocide—the extinction of our identity as a people,  loss of our ancestral lands, resources, livelihood and indigenous culture which  are the material base of our existence as indigenous peoples including our  indigenous socio-political institutions and systems, among others. Defend and Assert our  Human Rights!In the light of the commemoration of Martial Law on  September 21, we strongly urge Pres. Aquino to withdraw his government’s plan  for the continuity of Oplan Bantay Laya, stop the policy of political  killings,  and any other ‘counter  insurgency’ campaign that sacrifices civilians. We call on Pres. Aquino to  implement the recommendations  from the  UN Special Rapporteur  Stavenhagen’s 2002  Philippine Mission, UN Special Rapporteur Alston’s 2007 Philippine visit  and from the UNCERD.  As a signatory, it must also implement the  Comprehensive Agreement on the Respect for Human Rights and International  Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL), the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous  Peoples (UNDRIP), and other international declarations and conventions.
 More urgently, we call President Aquino and his government  to exercise political will under his “matuwid na daan” –investigate and hold GMA  accountable and all those in the military and police responsible for the political  killings, enforced disappearances, and massive human rights violations  committed during the Arroyo regime. The souls of the victims, their families,  colleagues and communities are crying out for justice!  Until justice is denied by the president in  power and political killings and state terrorism continues, the new government  will also be accountable.   To have genuine peace in the Cordillera, our communities  must be demilitarized and all military detachments inside communities and  populated areas must be pulled-out immediately.   To have genuine economic development and recognition of our collective  rights to our ancestral lands, destructive projects  and extractive industries must not be allowed.  Communities and lands destroyed by extractive industries must be rehabilitated  and returned to the rightful owners. Development aggression must be  stopped.  To have genuine recognition of  our inherent right to self determination and respect to our identity as  indigenous peoples and national minorities, our basic human rights and fundamental  freedoms must be respected, historic injustice and marginalization of the  Cordillera peoples must be rectified. #   
 
 
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