Sunday, January 31, 2010

Public right to info so near, yet so far - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Public right to info so near, yet so far - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Congress panel OKs measure

By Michael Lim Ubac, Christine Avendaño

Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines—A bicameral conference has approved the proposed Freedom of Information Act, moving a step closer to an enabling law that gives flesh to the rights of citizens to have easy access to information held by the government.

The public right to information was enshrined in the Constitution 23 years ago.

All bicam members—three senators and eight members of the House of Representatives—signed the reconciled version of the bill late Friday.

Quezon Rep. Lorenzo “Erin” R. Tañada III, chair of the House committee on human rights, Sunday said the bicam report should be ready for ratification by both chambers Monday afternoon.

Congress has only three session days left before it takes a three-month break for the election campaign.

Tañada said he “has high expectations that both the Senate and the House will deliver a piece of legislation that has been enshrined in the Constitution but has been wanting of an enabling law—the right of citizens to access to information on matters of public concern.”

Contrary to Senate Majority Leader Miguel Zubiri’s claim, Tañada said all House members of the bicam panel had signed the reconciled version as of Friday.

Zubiri Sunday said he was told by the Senate secretariat that the bicam report still needed the signature of three to four congressmen.

Zubiri, who said that senators were supportive of the measure, appealed to the House members “not to sabotage the bill.”

The House members of the bicam panel are Representatives Bienvenido Abante Jr. of Manila, Tañada, Eduardo Zialcita of Parañaque, Rodolfo Antonino of Nueva Ecija, Emmanuel Joel Villanueva and Cinchona Cruz Gonzales of the party-list group Cibac, Jesus Crispin Remulla of Cavite, and Rodante Marcoleta of the party-list group Alagad.

Their Senate counterparts are Zubiri and Senators Alan Peter and Pia Cayetano.

Tañada said Abante, chair of the House panel, had directed the committee secretariat to transmit the complete copy of the reconciled copy of the proposed law with the signatures of the eight House members to the Senate.

Speaker Prospero Nograles has identified the proposed Freedom of Information Act as among his priority measures when he took over the helm as Speaker, according to Tañada.

“It is incumbent upon him to now ensure its ratification. As a matter of course, both the House and the Senate should act on any bicam report that is already submitted. After that, the ball shifts to Malacañang,” added Tañada, who chaired the technical working group and shepherded the bill’s passage in the House.

House Bill No. 3732 was passed on May 12, 2008, while its counterpart version, Senate Bill No. 3308, was approved only in December last year.

If signed into law, the proposed act will make available to the people all public records in print, sound or visual form.

Corruption

The bill seeks to mandate all government agencies to upload all contracts or transactions on the Web, prompting Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano, principal author of SB 3308, to say that this would lessen corruption endemic in the bureaucracy.

“Corruption is one of the country’s biggest problems and challenges. Many lose hope not because corruption remains hidden but because despite knowing the instances of graft few, if any, get prosecuted,” said Cayetano, chair of the Senate committee on public information and mass media.

He said one reason for this was the lack of a paper trail and difficulty of producing evidence enough for conviction.

“Even the more experienced graft investigators and investigative journalists most of the time produce bits and pieces of evidence,” he said.

Game-changer

Cayetano, a lawyer, said the new law could be a game-changer.

“A paradigm shift fought for by the advocates for transparency and accountability, (the new law) will empower all Filipinos to be graft busters, or Sherlock Holmes’ assistants!” he said.

The act provides that the paper trail be easily accessible in all government agencies and criminal prosecution for those who refuse the release of data or information, he said.

Mandatory posting on Web

Cayetano said the new law would further encourage people to be involved in mandatory posting on the Web of items most associated with graft, like the procurement of contracts and the waiver of rights.

“The law will also further strengthen the Philippine media by empowering and boosting research into government dealings,” the senator said.

The Access to Information Network, an alliance of organizations advocating full enjoyment of the people’s right to information, hailed the impending passage of the bill.

“At stake, too, at this crucial juncture is the country’s strategic future, given the critical role of public access to information in combating corruption that has weighed down development, as well as its role in securing meaningful public participation to facilitate effective and responsive government policies,” the group said.

The act mandates government agencies to make available to the public “scrutiny, copying and reproduction, all information pertaining to official acts, transactions as well as government research data used as basis for policy development regardless of their physical form or format in which they are contained and by whom they were made.”

Full public disclosure

Besides upholding the right of the people to information, the proposed law promotes the state policy of “full public disclosure of all its transactions involving public interest” as enshrined in Article II, Section 28 of the Constitution (Declaration of Principles and State Policies) and Article 3, Section 7 (Bill of Rights).

If the government agency decides to deny any request for information, in whole or in part, it shall within seven days from the receipt of the request, notify the person making the request of such denial in writing or through electronic means.

Denial of access to information shall be appealable to the agency concerned 15 days from the notice of denial, but the Office of the Ombudsman can be asked to resolve the appeal in 60 days.

Penalty, exceptions

A penalty of imprisonment of one to six months, not less than one month but not more than six months awaits those who would violate the proposed legislation.

The bill sets out clearly defined and reasonable exceptions, including matters dealing with national defense and security, ongoing foreign affairs negotiations, trade secrets, drafts of executive orders and personal information.

Access to information may be denied on the following grounds:

• When the information is specifically authorized to be kept secret under guidelines established by an executive order.

• The information requested pertains to internal and external defense and law enforcement, when the revelation thereof would render a legitimate military or police station ineffective, unduly compromise the prevention, detection or suppression of a criminal activity, or endanger the life or physical safety of confidential or protected sources or witnesses, law enforcement and military personnel or their immediate families.

• The information requested pertains to the personal information of a natural person other than the requesting party and its disclosure would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of his or her personal privacy.

• The information requested pertains to trade, industrial, financial or commercial secrets of a natural or juridical person other than the requesting party.

• The information is privileged from production in legal proceedings by law or by the rules of court unless the person entitled to the privilege has waived it.

• The information requested is exempted by law or the Constitution.

• The information requested is obtained by any committee of either the Senate or the House in executive session.

• The information requested consists of drafts of decisions by any executive, administrative, judicial or quasi-judicial body in the exercise of their adjudicatory functions whenever their revelation would reasonably tend to impair the impartiality of verdicts or obstruct the administration of justice.

Safeguards

To safeguard against government abuse of these exceptions, the proposed law said an agency should specify the public interest sought to be protected by the nondisclosure of information.

Second, there is a legal presumption in favor of access to information.

Third, requesters have the opportunity to show that the public interest in the disclosure outweighs the harm to the public interest sought to be prevented by the exceptions.

Fourth, any public officer or employee claiming an exception under the act faces criminal liability if it is shown that the claim is manifestly devoid of factual basis. With a report from Juan V. Sarmiento Jr.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Baghdad Bombings Kill at Least 38 -- News from Antiwar.com

Baghdad Bombings Kill at Least 38 -- News from Antiwar.com

104 Wounded as Central Baghdad Hotels Bombed

by Jason Ditz, January 25, 2010

Bombing attacks against the Ishtar Sheraton, the Palestine Meridien, and the Babil Oberoi, three major hotels in the center of the Iraqi capital city of Baghdad, left at least 38 people killed and 104 wounded.

The hotels have been popular with Westerners and are thus surrounded by a large amount of security. Several police were among the casualties in the attacks, though the exact number of civilians and security forces killed was not immediately clear.

The Iraqi government was quick to blame Ba’athists for the attacks, though at this point it does not appear that the attacks have been claimed by any group. The attack was just the latest in a string of high profile attacks in and around Baghdad, which have been variously blamed on the Ba’athists, al-Qaeda, the Syrian government, or some combination thereof.

Yet those previous attacks all targeted government ministries, suggesting today’s attack may not have been directly related. Despite this, it is clear that Iraq’s constant security crackdowns in Baghdad, which have at times gotten so severe they have led locals to suspect a military coup had taken place, are having little effect on would-be attackers.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Israel targets Palestinian anti-wall activists - The National Newspaper

Israel targets Palestinian anti-wall activists - The National Newspaper

Israel targets Palestinian anti-wall activists

Omar Karmi, Foreign Correspondent

  • Last Updated: January 18. 2010 10:50PM UAE / January 18. 2010 6:50PM GMT

Relatives of Jamal Juma’ take part in a protest along with activists to demand his release, at the Bitwnia Checkpoint near Ramallah. Atef Safadi / AFP

RAMALLAH, WEST BANK // Jamal Juma’ could not help but laugh at one of the accusations he said he had been threatened with while in Israeli detention.

“They said they would indict me for links to Hizbollah. They didn’t like it when I started laughing,” Mr Juma’, a lifelong communist, said on Sunday, five days after his release.


He was talking in an office in Ramallah at the headquarters of the Stop the Wall organisation, of which he is a coordinator. Stop the Wall is a Palestinian grassroots effort dedicated to peaceful and popular resistance against the separation barrier Israel is building up and down the occupied territories.

Mr Juma’ spent 27 days in detention after being arrested at his home in Jerusalem in December. Apart from the threatened charge of links to Hizbollah, Mr Juma’ believed he was to be charged with incitement. But no charge was ever brought and no case was ever heard. “I think they wanted to intimidate me. They threatened me, saying they would harm my reputation, not leave me alone and put me in prison for a long time,” Mr Juma’ said.


He is one of a long-line of grassroots leaders and activists that appear to have been targeted in recent weeks and months for arrest by the Israeli army. Last week alone, 12 Palestinian activists were arrested in three separate army incursions. Since December, the number has risen to the dozens, including a Czech national who was seized from her apartment in Ramallah in the middle of the night and deported.

Jonathan Pollak, an Israeli activist with the Popular Struggle Coordination Committees, said: “It is clear that there are concerted efforts, both on the ground and through legal measures, to take action against the popular movements."


Stop the Wall and Mr Pollak’s group help organise weekly protests against the barrier in Palestinian villages, most famously Bil’in and Ni’lin, where the barbed-wire fence and military-only road cut off villagers from their agricultural land.

Every Friday, a two dozen villagers along with Palestinian, Israeli and international activists brave the tear gas, sound grenades and some times live fire of the Israeli army to break through the barrier and keep the issue alive in both the Israeli courts and the media.

They have had an effect. In Bil’in, for example, constant popular pressure led the Israeli high court in 2007 to order a change of the route of the barrier. It still runs inside occupied territory, however, and the re-routing was ordered only because the court found insufficient security justification for the route as planned.

The Israeli high court has never ruled on the general legality of the barrier that the Israeli government says is intended for security. But Palestinians point out that so far, more than 60 per cent complete, the barrier has left 10 per cent of West Bank territory, including East Jerusalem, between the 1967 borders and the barrier. That, they say, is a blatant land grab.

Indeed, an advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice in The Hague in 2004 found the barrier to be illegal where it dipped into occupied territory.

The nature of the demonstrations against the barrier has also had international resonance. The Elders, a group of former statesmen that includes Jimmy Carter, the former US president, and Desmond Tutu, a South African archbishop, joined the demonstrations, went when they were here. Naomi Klein, the Canadian-American author, also went.

Increasingly, Palestinian politicians are making a point of appearing. Salam Fayyad, the prime minister, has taken part, while Fatah is increasingly beginning to take notice.

Greater fame has come at a price. One person was killed during a demonstration in Bil’in last year, and 32 villagers have been arrested over the past six months alone. Mr Pollak said he was increasingly seeing the Israeli Army employ heavier tactics against activists, including the use of live fire against demonstrators, as well as more arrests and night-time raids into Palestinian villages.

Activists say the stepped-up military action is proof that their strategy of non-violent direct action against the Israeli separation barrier has Israel worried.

“The [popular] movement has become a problem for Israel. Israel believes that by suppressing the movement it will gain more than it loses,” Mr Pollak said.

Mr Juma’ believes his greater international profile helped him when during his detention, which was criticised by, among others, Amnesty International. To charge a man who calls for unarmed and peaceful resistance to a barrier that is illegal under international law with incitement proved difficult even for Israel as a result, Mr Juma’ said.

“This movement is now a Palestinian struggle with international support. Israel can’t stop it and it can’t accuse those working on these campaigns of being terrorists. So now they are trying to intimidate us.”


okarmi@thenational.ae

Friday, January 15, 2010

Palace: Ampatuans lucky gov’t didn’t nuke them - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Palace: Ampatuans lucky gov’t didn’t nuke them - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

By TJ Burgonio
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 01:07:00 01/16/2010

MANILA, Philippines – Dropped like a hot potato? They should feel lucky.

Malacañang On Friday bristled at the remarks of a lawyer of the powerful Ampatuans assailing President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo for abandoning them in the aftermath of the Nov. 23 massacre of 57 persons in Maguindanao.

“It’s a good thing that they’re being dropped like a hot potato and that a neutron bomb wasn’t dropped on them after what some members of the family have been accused of doing,” Press Secretary Cerge Remonde said at a briefing.

Murder outweighs debt

Remonde said accountability for the mass murder far outweighed whatever political debt Ms Arroyo owed the Ampatuans.

“Responsibility for a crime as heinous as the Maguindanao massacre cannot be bound by any utang na loob (debt of gratitude),” he said.

Ampatuan clan members have been arrested and charged in connection with the massacre of 57 civilians, including journalists, lawyers and members of the rival Mangudadatu clan.

Philip Pantojan, a lawyer of the Ampatuans, lamented on Wednesday that Malacañang had turned its back on them and even backed the filing of charges against them in an attempt to save face.

And yet, Pantojan said, the Ampatuans delivered crucial votes for Ms Arroyo that ensured her victory in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in the 2004 presidential election.

He also said that in their bailiwick, Maguindanao, the Ampatuans produced a zero vote for Ms Arroyo’s then opponent, the late actor Fernando Poe Jr.

RP’s ‘nightmare’

Remonde said the most that the government could do was to accord the Ampatuans due process:

“We still assure them that due process is being conducted. But if their lawyers expect that they can get away with it just because they supported the President in the last elections, then they must be dreaming. But their dream will be the country’s nightmare,” he said.

Prospero Pichay, Ms Arroyo’s political adviser, said the Ampatuans should not begrudge Ms Arroyo for mobilizing government power and resources to bring them to justice.

“No one is above the law. The President is letting the wheels of justice turn. Even if [one] is the brother of the President and he violates the law, I’m sure the President will let the wheels of justice turn,” Pichay said.

“How many of our colleagues in the media died [on Nov. 23]? Debt of gratitude is out of the question here,” he said.

Arroyo votes also from Cebu

Remonde said it was unwise for the Ampatuans to assume that their support for Ms Arroyo could shield them from prosecution over a wrongdoing.

“We support a President because we believe in the President’s programs. But it’s wrong to assume that this same President will tolerate any wrongdoing. What kind of a President is that?” he said.

But can Malacañang live with the fact that the Ampatuans delivered the votes for Ms Arroyo?

“Yes, we can live with the fact, especially because the larger part is that it’s not only the vote of the Ampatuans in Maguindanao that made the President win,” Remonde said.

“If we speak of any group voting, I claim that it is the Cebuano vote that really made her win. You cannot cheat in a place like Cebu,” he said.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Obama to Seek $708 Billion for Wars in 2011 -- News from Antiwar.com

Obama to Seek $708 Billion for Wars in 2011 -- News from Antiwar.com

Request Is On Top of $33 Billion 'Emergency' Request
by Jason Ditz, January 13, 2010

In a request that will likely put the call for $33 billion in “emergency” war funds for 2010 in a new light, President Obama is now planning to request at least a $708 billion military budget for fiscal year 2011. This record amount for America’s already enormous military even surpasses the Bush Administration’s largest annual expenditures for wars.

The revelation came as part of the Obama Administration’s “Quadrennial Defense Review,” (QDR) which laid out the size of its planned military budgets and military goals through 2015.

The QDR will reportedly plan for dramatic cuts in the cost of war past fiscal year 2011, under the assumption that the Iraq War and Afghan War won’t cost nearly so much by that point.

Yet it should be noted that the Obama Administration previously laid out a plan which anticipated those savings starting in 2011, and now that it is time to actually seek the 2011 war funds it has simply been pushed back another year.

The administration maintains that the Iraq pullout is “on pace” despite having removed only a handful of troops in 2009, while officials are already suggesting that the pledge to start an Afghan pullout in 2011 is probably not sincere.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

US Killed 700 Civilians in Pakistan Drone Strikes in 2009 -- News from Antiwar.com

US Killed 700 Civilians in Pakistan Drone Strikes in 2009 -- News from Antiwar.com

'Year of the Drone Strike' Netted Only Five Actual Militant Leaders

by Jason Ditz, January 02, 2010

On January 1, 2009, a US drone strike killed two senior al-Qaeda leaders, the first in what then President-elect Barack Obama had said would be a dramatic escalation of the aerial bombardment of Pakistan’s tribal area.

And escalate it did. The US launched 44 distinct drone strikes in Pakistan in 2009, far more than in previous years. The pinnacle of America’s drone achievements was in August, when they killed Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leader Baitullah Mehsud.

Much has been made of the successes, but while the strikes have been regular and they almost always are presented by Pakistan’s intelligence community as having killed “suspects,” the actual successes are few and far between, with only five confirmed kills of real militant leaders, and a handful of unconfirmed claims that usually haven’t panned out.

The vast majority of the deaths, around 700 according to one estimate, have been innocent civilians. With such a massive civilian toll and so little to show for it, it is no wonder that Pakistani people have been up in arms over the continued strikes.

But US officials have rarely commented on the drone strikes, except on those rare occasions when they actually kill someone meaningful, and seem completely ambivalent to the hundreds of innocent people killed in the meantime. The ultimate example of this was June 22-23.

On June 22, the US struck at a house officials called a “suspected militant hideout,” burying a few locals inside. When others rushed to the scene to rescue them, they launched another missile, killing 13 apparently innocent Pakistanis. When they held a funeral procession on June 23, the US hit that too, ostensibly on the belief that Baitullah Mehsud might be among the mourners. He wasn’t, but the attack killed at least 80 more people.

When announcing the December escalation into Afghanistan, President Obama reportedly also approved an escalation of drone strikes into Pakistan. It seems unlikely that the intelligence has gotten any better, however, and civilians across North and South Waziristan are in an understandable panic.