Allegations: The complainant organizations allege a deteriorating labour rights
situation in the country, characterized by numerous incidents of extra-judicial killings of
trade union leaders and members, attempted assassinations, illegal arrests and detention,
red-tagging, harassment, intimidation and threats against unionists, as well as trade union
repression and intervention in union affairs. The complainants denounce the Government’s
failure to adequately investigate these cases and bring the perpetrators to justice,
reinforcing the climate of impunity, violence and insecurity with its damaging effect on the
exercise of trade union rights
- 639. The Committee last examined this case (submitted in February 2016)
at its November 2021 meeting, when it presented an interim report to the Governing Body
[see 396th Report, paras 508–528 approved by the Governing Body at its 343rd Session].
- 640. In a communication dated 1 September 2021, the Kilusang Mayo Uno
(KMU) joined the case and provided additional information.
- 641. The Government provided its observations in a communication dated 30
September 2022.
- 642. The Philippines has ratified the Freedom of Association and
Protection of the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87), and the Right to Organise
and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
A. Previous examination of the case
A. Previous examination of the case- 643. At its November 2021 meeting, the Committee made the following
recommendations [see 396th Report, para. 528]:
- (a) Recalling that the murders of
Antonio “Dodong” Petalcorin, Emilio Rivera and Kagi Alimudin Lucman took place in
2013 and that the Government has indicated that they were, or continue to be,
investigated through the regular processes of criminal investigation and
prosecution, the Committee once again expresses its firm expectation that the
perpetrators in the mentioned cases will be brought to trial and convicted without
further delay. The Committee trusts that the Government will continue to make every
effort in this regard and urges the Government to keep it informed of any progress
made.
- (b) The Committee urges the Government to provide a detailed reply to
the serious allegations of extra-judicial killings, illegal arrests, detention,
threats, intimidation, harassment and red-tagging of trade unionists communicated by
the ITF, the UMA and the NFSW-FGT and expects the Government to ensure that all of
the above allegations will be rapidly investigated and perpetrators of violence
against trade unionists identified and brought to justice, irrespective of whether
they are private persons or State agents, so as to combat impunity and prevent the
repetition of such acts. The Committee trusts that the Government will prioritize
investigations into these serious incidents and requests it to keep it informed of
the progress made in this regard, including the status of any cases
initiated.
- (c) The Committee urges the Government to ensure the immediate
release of any detained trade unionists, should their arrest or detention be
connected to the legitimate exercise of their trade union rights.
- (d)
Finally, emphasizing the Government’s responsibility with regard to investigations
into allegations of violence against workers who are organizing or otherwise
defending workers’ interests, the Committee expects the Government to do everything
in its power to ensure that any past or future allegations of labour-related
killings and other forms of violence against trade unionists are rapidly and
properly investigated, so as to clarify the circumstances of the incidents,
including the presence of any direct or indirect relation to trade union activity,
determine responsibilities and punish the perpetrators with a view to preventing the
repetition of such acts. The Committee also urges the Government to reinforce its
efforts in combating violence against trade unionists by designing and implementing
any necessary measures to this effect, including clear guidance and instructions to
all State officials and operationalization of national monitoring and investigative
mechanisms, so as to prevent recurring incidents of violence against trade union
members and leaders and to ensure that they are not indiscriminately linked to
insurgency or other paramilitary groups, considering the stigmatizing effect this
may have on the exercise of legitimate trade union activities.
- (e) The
Committee draws the special attention of the Governing Body to the serious and
urgent nature of the matters dealt with in this case.
B. Complainants’ additional allegations
B. Complainants’ additional allegations- 644. On 1 September 2021, the KMU submitted additional information
alleging that the Government has openly declared unions affiliated with the KMU, as well
as other organizations – the Confederation for Unity, Recognition of Government
Employees (COURAGE) and the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT) – as
communist-terrorist organizations leading to blatant abuses of workers’ rights with
impunity. The complainants point to a drastic increase in incidents of trade union
repression and deprivation of workers’ rights to organize since the declaration and
enforcement of martial law in the Mindanao region in 2017, as well as a deteriorating
labour rights situation in the Southern Tagalog region. In particular, they allege
numerous incidents of extra-judicial killings, attempted assassinations, illegal
arrests, detention, threats, harassment and intimidation of trade union leaders, as well
as various forms of trade union repression and intervention in trade union affairs
between 2017 and 2021. They also denounce the failure of the Government to adequately
investigate these cases and bring the perpetrators to justice, reinforcing the climate
of impunity, violence and insecurity, with its damaging effect on the exercise of trade
union rights.
- 645. The complainants allege that, alongside “the war on drugs”, trade
unionists and workers are also being targeted and killed during raids by state forces,
which aim at preventing unionists from exercising their role and at stopping unionism
altogether. They allege that the climate of impunity allows for the killing of union
leaders and denounce the following concrete incidents of murder and attempted
murder:
- • On 31 October 2018, Danny Boy Bautista, an active member of the Nagkahiusang Mamumuo sa Suyapa Farm Union (NAMASUFA-NAFLU-KMU) was shot dead in the Compostela public market. The police have not yet informed of the name of the suspect but indicated that his death was highly related to his union involvement.
- • In November 2018, Jerry Alicante, another active union member from NAMASUFA was shot but survived the assassination attempt, similarly as another unionist, Victor Ageas, in September 2018.
- • In November 2018, unidentified individuals started a fire at the family house of NAMASUFA President Paul John Dizon, but the fire was put out; the next day they came back and fired eight shots before fleeing. In December 2018, the arsonists burned the house of the NAMASUFA President, as well as the union office adjacent to the President’s house and the house of the former President Vicente Barrios.
- • In November 2019, Reynaldo Malaborbor, a pioneer convenor of the Pagkakaisa ng Manggagawa sa Timog Katagalugan (PAMANTIK-KMU), a former union member of the Trade Union of the Philippines – February Six Movement and a federation leader of the Trade Unions of the Philippines and Allied Services (TUPAS), was shot four times by an unknown assailant, as he was returning from the Cabuyao city hall where he was negotiating the release of detained striking workers. He was killed on the spot before the assailant fled with another accomplice. Later that day, residents indicated that unknown men had been roving around Malaborbor’s residence.
- • On 7 March 2021, nine activists were killed and six arrested in the “bloody killings” or “the Bloody Sunday” raids by the police and the military. Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion, the provincial coordinator of the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan in Cavite province and workers’ leader in several organizations was brutally murdered at the Workers’ Assistance Center (WAC) in Dasmariñas, Cavite by elements of the police. The units forcibly entered the premises where Asuncion, his wife and another volunteer were sleeping. At gunpoint, they forced the volunteer to the floor and later brought him and Asuncion’s wife outside to tell them that they would conduct a search but could not produce the search warrant. They then heard screams and several gunshots from the building and saw Asuncion’s body loaded into a police vehicle; he sustained six gunshot wounds. The police proceeded with a search of the building and an investigator later told Asuncion’s wife that they did not find any firearms or explosives. On the same day, Melvin Dasigao and Mark Lee “MakMak” Bacasno, members of the San Isidro Kasiglahan Fraternity and Cooperation for Livelihood, Justice and Peace, were assassinated. Unidentified men arrived at the residence of Dasigao in Kasiglahan Village, Rodriguez, Rizal, shouted at the residents and brought his wife and two children outside when they heard three gunshots and saw Dasigao’s body brought outside. In the same village, armed men forced entry into the residence of Bacasno. Police were heard shouting that they found guns and drugs inside and the neighbours heard a gunshot and an explosion. The next day, the families of the two men were denied access to their bodies at the Antipolo Funeral Homes, where the police brought them, as well as the bodies of four others allegedly killed by the police. The complainants claim that the perpetrators of these crimes were the units of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) of the police, the Special Action Force and an army brigade.
- • On 28 March 2021, Dandy Miguel, a national union leader and Vice-Chairperson of PAMANTIK-KMU (a regional chapter of the KMU), National Council Member of the KMU and the President of the Power of United Workers of Fuji Electric Philippines, was assassinated as he was riding back home on his motorcycle after a consultation with union leaders in Calambra, Laguna. Miguel was cornered by two motorcycles, shot multiple times and sustained eight gunshot wounds which led to his death. Miguel was working on the cases of “the Bloody Sunday” incidents at the time of his death, helping families to file complaints before the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) and assisting union leaders to file complaints of threats, harassment and intimidation.
- • The complainants also point out that, according to reports from the Centre for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR), as of August 2021, there were 56 cases of extra-judicial killings among working people in the country under the Duterte administration, 17 of which were from agricultural unions and were previously submitted to the Committee in this case by the Federation of Agricultural Workers Philippines (UMA) and the National Federation of Sugar Workers – Food and General Trade (NFSW-FGT).
- 646. The complainants further claim that the Government weaponizes the
law to imprison unionists – they are targeted, under surveillance, threatened and
subjected to arbitrary arrest and detention based on false criminal charges, fake
evidence and ungrounded or manufactured search warrants and warrants of arrest.
According to the complainants, unionists are being criminalized for their trade union
activities leading to years of detention on mere allegations of criminal acts they did
not commit, constituting a major blow to the trade union movement in the country. Often,
they are subjected to hours of interrogation, as well as physical, verbal and
psychological abuse and torture. The complainants point to the following concrete
incidents of arbitrary arrest and detention of trade unionists based on false
charges:
- • In February 2018, Marklen Maojo Maga, a trade union activist involved in organizing a strike of public utility jeepney drivers and an organizer of unions within the KMU in Metro Manila and nearby provinces, was arrested for the illegal possession of a gun. His partner, Eleanor De Guzman, a KMU leader, and their son were forced to leave their home for security reasons. Maga was convicted in June 2019 and his case is under appeal.
- • Between June and October 2018, false criminal charges led to the illegal arrest and detention of Juan Alexander Reyes, Rowena and Oliver Rosales and Ireneo Atadero, all of whom are members of workers’ organizations (KMU, Workers’ Association in Quezon City and COURAGE). The arrests were conducted jointly by the CIDG-National Capital Region of the Philippine National Police (CIDG-NCR) and the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (ISAFP). The unionists were planted with a handgun or an explosive device and charged either with murder or arson committed in Agusan del Norte, a province which they had never visited. They are not afforded due process, false witnesses and testimonies are used in the charges against them and they are prevented from performing their role as trade union organizers while in detention.
- • In March 2019, Eugene Garcia, President of the Union of Workers of Pioneer Float Glass Manufacturing Inc., was arrested for the possession of a gun on the basis of planted evidence after a search warrant was implemented in his residence. Garcia’s illegal arrest took place at the time the union was asserting its collective bargaining agreement through a series of dialogues with the new management, which refused to recognize the agreement and the union. He has yet to face trial before the Regional Trial Court.
- • In March 2019, around 50 members of the police in ten vehicles arrived at the residence of Ricky Chavez, a board member of the Toyota Motors Philippines Corporation Workers’ Association, to serve a search warrant but they could not find him. Before the search, Chavez joined a protest that the union organized to commemorate 18 years since the dismissals of 233 unionists in 2001.
- • In October 2019, following simultaneous police raids of offices of people’s organizations in Bacolod City, Negros Occidental, 55 people were arrested, including 21 bus drivers and the KMU Negros Island General Secretary Noli Rosales, who was detained on false charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives, but his case was dismissed in 2021. Anne Krueger, a community journalist and organizer, was also arrested by the CIDG during a raid of the GABRIELA office (A National Alliance of Women) in Bacolod City and although later released on bail, she still faces false charges of illegal possession of firearms and ammunition.
- • On 7 September 2020, Ramon Rescovilla, Vice-President of PISTON, a national transport federation of jeepney drivers affiliated with the KMU, was arrested in Daraga City, Albay, by 20 police officers, handcuffed, given a bag with a grenade and a handgun and later brought to the Daraga police station where he was interrogated and punched five times by men he suspected to be state intelligence agents. He was denied medical attention and is now facing false charges of illegal possession of firearms, explosives and murder.
- • On 4 December 2020, Jose A. Bernardino, a trade union organizer in the industrial enclaves and of transport workers in the Pampanga province, was forcefully arrested by state operatives and handcuffed while travelling to Angeles City, Pampanga. Bernardino is being charged with rebellion and illegal possession of firearms, ammunition and explosives, even though he was not carrying any of these during his arrest by the police.
- • On 10 December 2020, armed men conducted a staged search in the apartment of Romina Astudillo in Quezon City, where she, Mark Ryan Cruz and Jaymie Gregorio were staying. They found a backpack with a grenade and brought the three unionists to the CIDG-NCR in Camp Crame where they were interrogated without counsel. All three are members of the KMU – Astudillo was elected as Deputy Secretary-General and Cruz as Council at-large, while Gregorio organized workers in the port areas and nearby communities in Smokey Mountain in Manila
- • On 10 December 2020, 40 officials from the CIDG-NCR conducted a staged search at the apartment of Joel Demate’s daughter and found a grenade, a rifle, a pistol and ammunition. Demate, who is a labour organizer working with the Solidarity of Labor for Rights and Welfare, was brought to the police and is facing multiple charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives.
- • On 10 December 2020, around 30 armed personnel from the Quezon City Police District SWAT and the CIDG Quezon City, some wearing uniforms while others in plain clothes, broke into the residence of Dennise Velasco, an organizer from Defend Jobs Philippines, his wife and her brother. Officials wearing black uniforms instructed the men to lie down with their hands tied behind their back, while the police and barangay officials conducted a search, in which they supposedly found guns, ammunition and a grenade.
- • On 4 March 2021, the police took Arnedo “Nedo” Lagunias, former Secretary of the Honda Cars Workers’ Union-OLALIA-KMU in Biñan City, Laguna, and other residents from his house, conducted a search and supposedly found a handgun and a grenade, vehemently denied by Lagunias, who is now facing charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives.
- • On 4 March 2021, about 50 officials from the CIDG surrounded and broke down the door of the house of Ramir Corcolon in San Pablo City, Laguna and conducted a search, which supposedly led to the finding of a gun, a grenade and an improvised explosive device. Corcolon is the President of the San Pablo City Water District Employees’ Association and the Secretary-General of the Water System Employees’ Response.
- • On 7 March 2021 (“Bloody Sunday” arrests), Steve Mendoza, the Executive Vice-President of the labour federation OLALIA-KMU and former union President of the Philsteel Workers’ Union-OLALIA-KMU, and his partner Rafaela Barquilla were awakened by armed men in camouflage destroying their steel gate. Although Mendoza insisted to see the search warrant and asked the men to identify themselves, the men broke into the house, forced Mendoza on the ground at gunpoint, sent his wife and son outside and then ransacked the house. They later declared that they had found a handgun inside and Mendoza was charged with illegal possession of firearms, ammunition and explosives.
- • On 7 March 2021 (“Bloody Sunday” arrests), at least 20 armed men in camouflage uniforms forced their entry into the Defend Yulo Farmers Office in Cabuyao, Laguna, where Elizabeth “Mags” Camoral and four others were staying, pointed a gun to her companion, shouted and ransacked the office. They found a handgun supposedly owned by Camoral, who was released on bail but still faces false charges of illegal possession of firearms. Camoral is the former President of the F-Tech Workers’ Union and the provincial coordinator for BAYAN-Laguna.
- • On 7 March 2021 (“Bloody Sunday” arrests), armed men forced entry into the house of Eugene Eugenio, a member of F-Tech Workers’ Union province and the President of the Advancement of Rights and Responsibilities of Organized Workers. The men indicated they were looking for a pistol, which they allegedly found.
- • On 30 March 2021, around 40 CIDG personnel surrounded the residence of Florentino “Pol” Viuya, Chairperson of the Workers’ Alliance in Region III and the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan in Central Luzon. Viuya insisted that his colleagues and barangay officials should be present during the search but the CIDG officials went around the house and found an open window at the back. After the search was conducted, the police pointed to a hand grenade in plain view on the windowsill of the same open window and arrested Viuya. On the same day, Joseph Canlas, peasant leader of the AMGL-Alliance of Peasants in Central Luzon was arrested and detained for the same false charges using a grenade as fake evidence. Canlas was denied pretrial remedies even though he was sick, contracted COVID-19 in detention and died in the hospital.
- 647. Furthermore, the complainants point to several instances of violent
dispersal of workers’ strikes:
- • In June 2017, around 100 fully armed combined elements of the armed forces and the police, together with strike-breakers from the fruit-producing company, violently dispersed striking workers from the Shin Sun Workers’ Union (SSWU), an affiliate of the National Federation Labor Union (NAFLU-KMU), beat them up and used formalin to prevent the workers from defending the picket line. Following the strike dispersal, 12 workers and their supporters were arrested: Vicente “Boy” Barrios; Eric Noble; Pio Salar; Elisar Lague; Angelito Atamosa; Crispo Atamosa; Gerry Atamosa; Ernesto Calinawan; Carmin Atamosa; Francisco Milallos; Ritiza Milallos and Lanie Rose Millalos.
- • In April 2018, following the creation of workers the United Workers of NutriAsia, the condiment-producing enterprise in Marilao, Bulacan attempted to block its registration and dismissed union officers, including Jessie Gemola, the union President. As a result of union busting, illegal dismissals and other forms of unfair labour practices, the union conducted a strike in June 2018, during which armed policemen tried to enter the vicinity of the striking workers. After the regular courts ordered the striking workers to restrain from obstructing the ingress to the company, the Bulacan Provincial Police and private security from the company violently dispersed the protesting workers and arrested 23 of them and their supporters on charges of physical assault: Mercy Macatabas Taborada; Elena Francisco Latoza; Mylene Arellano Baysa; Princess Punzalan Pineda; Ronello Hingpit Espejon; Jaymark M. Bautista; Jhon Paul L. Gonzales; Lloyd M. Salonga; Carmina R. Ileto; Romnick P. Agarpao; Ulysis Uy; Dinnis Datuin; Fernando Miguel B. Collantes; Christian S. Maniquiz; Rudy S. Magalang; Dinalyn V. Beringuel; Emerson C. Batarina; Reychelle Sta. Rosa; Jovilou Angcon; Lueuile Bangcat; Ronald Gillego; Francis Estrella and Jessie Villacastin. At the end of July 2018, violence occurred again when the private security from the company and the police dispersed the workers’ picket line, which was situated more than 100 metres away from the company’s main gate, using batons, truncheon and stones, resulting in injuries to more than 40 workers and their supporters and the arrest of 19 workers, 8 of whom were striking workers: Daisy Jane Heda; Robert Sequino; Sedney Villamor; Jerald Verano; Mark Ponce; Dannyboy Conel; Marylle Jons Peligro and Jeovelyn Bornales.
- • In July 2018, a sit-down strike of workers from the Unified Power of Workers in Middleby Philippines Inc., an association of contractual workers in a factory in Biñan City, Laguna, was violently dispersed, causing injuries to five workers and seven workers were brought to the police station.
- • In October 2018, the police, the military and the local government unit brought in strike-breakers and non-striking workers to disperse the strike of NAMASUFA workers at Sumifru, a banana-exporting company in Compostela Town. A few days later, seven NAMASUFA members were flagged down by unidentified men, supposedly goons of the company, and beaten. Later on, strike-breakers (hired goons and non-striking workers), escorted by officers of the armed forces and the police, attacked strike camps, tearing down paraphernalia and assaulting striking workers, which led to injuries to 27 workers and damage to union property.
- • In June 2019, hundreds of men in black clothing attacked the 200 workers of the Pepmaco Workers’ Union who were sleeping at their picket line, causing serious injuries to several of them and destroying the picket line. In August 2019, after the striking workers held a protest at the gate of the industrial park, the police arbitrarily arrested 25 workers, forced them into a police vehicle and detained 18 of them. The workers were released the following day after a court order referred to the Department of Justice Memo Circulars enjoining prosecutors to first secure clearance from the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) before taking cognizance of complaints and filing cases arising out of or related to labour dispute.
- • In July 2019, the police and private security guards from a condiment-producing enterprise in Cabuyao, Laguna threw rocks at the 400 striking workers, intimidating them with long firearms, and used metal bars and truncheons to attack them. As a result, 19 workers were seriously injured and 17 arrested, including three union officers, and charged with malicious mischief, grave coercion and direct assault. They were denied remedies which led to their prolonged detention and were only released in December 2019 after posting bail, while the case against them continues.
- 648. Finally, the complainants submit that the administration can,
through the Anti-Terror Council and based on the Anti-Terrorism Act, arbitrarily
proscribe individuals and organizations as terrorists, or simply use the law as a
blanket in its terrorist-tagging of legitimate organizations and their leaders. The
tagging of the KMU as a terrorist organization is, according to the complainants, a
policy declaration and an order to eradicate unions and prevent workers from organizing
themselves. Materials posted in public places and published on social media (official
police accounts or state-funded fake accounts) label the KMU and its officers as
supporters of the New People’s Army (NPA) or its legal front, as “terrorists” or members
of “communist-terrorist organizations”, with the aim of making workers withdraw their
membership or dissuading them from joining unions. The complainants claim that this
vilification campaign against unionists is directed towards building a pretext for
further abuses and violations of human rights and is part of the “whole of nation”
national security approach where every segment of the Government is tasked with helping
to identify probable insurgents and opponents of the regime, leading to Government
instrumentalities conducting inventory of members of progressive organizations and
submitting this information to the military to support the counter-insurgency efforts.
In practice, this translates into grave threats among union leaders and members,
vilification campaigns, anti-union propaganda by the military, fake surrenders, direct
intervention of the military in union affairs, including union elections and forced
disaffiliation from unions and federations.
- 649. The complainants allege in this regard that the perpetrators of some
of these incidents in the Southern Tagalog region are units from the armed forces in
Southern Luzon, headed by the now-retired Lieutenant General Antonio Parlade Jr between
2019 and mid-2021 and that both the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed
Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) and the Joint Industrial Peace Coordinating Office (now referred to
as the Alliance for Industrial Peace and Program Office (AIPPO)) have been engaged in
propaganda and persistent harassment and threats against union leaders, often cascading
in waves of house visits by state agents to threaten union leaders to surrender as NPA
rebels or to disaffiliate from their unions in exchange for withdrawing any threats of
arrest or abduction. They have also been interfering with union affairs, dislodging
union officers and dismantling workers’ organizations. The complainants point to the
following specific incidents:
- • Since February 2018, the military conducted house-to-house campaigns and assemblies among NAMASUFA workers and their relatives in Compostela Town, with the aim of convincing KMU members to surrender themselves to the military to clear their names from the list of NPA supporters and sympathizers or to withdraw their membership from KMU unions. The local government in Compostela Town even declared the KMU as a persona non grata.
- • In February 2019, three union leaders from the Musahamat Workers’ Labour Union (MWLU), a local affiliate of the NAFLU-KMU in Pantukan, Compostela Valley, namely Esperidion Cabaltera, union President, Richard Genabe, Vice-President and Ronald Rosales, secretary, were abducted from their homes, brought to a military camp, detained overnight without cause, interrogated and coerced to admit they were members of the NPA, resign from the KMU and tell others to do the same. The three unionists denied the allegations but signed the documents and although they were released the following day, soldiers are closely monitoring them. After their release, 153 union members were forced to sign a form stating that they would resign from the KMU to have their names cleared. Prior to their abduction in February 2019, Cabaltera and Genabe had already been harassed by unidentified armed men suspected to be members of the armed forces. The complainants indicate that the incidents concerning both Cabaltera and Genabe had already been reported to the Committee in Case No. 3119 concerning the Philippines, where the Committee requested the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure the full and swift investigation and resolution of alleged acts of harassment of union leaders and members of KMU-affiliated unions, including the Musahamat union members and activists (see Case No. 3119, 387th Report, October 2018, paragraph 626)
- • In July 2019, the president of the Filipinas Palm Oil Plantation Workers Union submitted to the leadership of the NAFLU-KMU a letter declaring its disaffiliation from the Federation, citing red-tagging and harassment of its members by the military as the main reason for disaffiliation.
- • In September 2019, during the period of union elections, members of the United Workers of Mindanao Agriculture Inc. spotted posters and flyers around the plantation vilifying the union and its affiliate federation, the NAFLU, using the logo of the NPA.
- • Between February and May 2020, PAMANTIK-KMU has documented at least ten union members of the Coca-Cola Plant Employees Union in Santa Rosa who were victims of harassment, intimidation and threats by agents of the NTF-ELCAC, which also led to the abduction of some union members in April 2020 who were later presented as rebel surrenderers.
- • In February 2020, the police started intimidating union members from the Nagkakaisang Manggagawa ng Supreme (NMS-NAFLU-KMU), a union at a steel producing company in Bulacan, through continuous factory visits, red-tagging and interference in union activities (meetings and local elections), which resulted in the election of a management union in the latest elections.
- • Since April 2020, President of OLALIA-KMU Hermenigildo “Hermie” Marasigan has been in hiding due to threats to his security. In July 2021, his wife reported that around five uniformed men visited their house to help Marasigan clear his name and warned that the intelligence unit would eventually track him down. In August 2021, four military men visited their residence again with the same objective.
- • Between May and November 2020, police officers introducing themselves as part of the AIPPO, have been entering and interfering with union activities of the Alcophil Workers’ Union-Alliance of Genuine Labor Organizations-KMU. Union President Eliseo Taping has been vilified and red-tagged with proliferation of posters placed in the vicinity of the company factory in Valenzuela, Manila.
- • Between December 2020 and March 2021, at least two union officers from the Optodev Workers’ Union-NAFLU-KMU were subjected to surveillance, threats and harassment at their residences in Laguna.
- • Between November 2020 and September 2021, the NXP Workers’ Union-NAFLU-KMU documented 35 union officers and members who had been visited at least once at the factory or at their residences in Cabuyao and Canlubang in Laguna by state agents introducing themselves as members of the NTF-ELCAC and asked about their offices, union activities and union dues.
- • Between February and August 2021, at least 15 leaders and members of the Wyeth Philippines Progressive Workers’ Union–Drug and Food Alliance-KMU have been visited at least once by state agents introducing themselves as members of the NTF-ELCAC. Union officer Rico Dimaano and the union President were threatened into signing a board resolution declaring the union’s disaffiliation from the KMU.
- • In March 2021, a former KMU staff (name not provided) working on renovations of the house of Eleanor de Guzman, the KMU Human Rights Director, was interrogated by two men from the CIDG who indicated that the unit was conducting regular surveillance of de Guzman’s residence and would deploy a team to abduct de Guzman and others.
- • In June 2021, posters tagging the KMU and its chairperson Elmer Labog as terrorist, were seen in the vicinity of the KMU headquarters in Barangay Claro in Quezon City, Laguna and Davao City. Government social media pages and state-funded fake accounts also tag the KMU and its officers as terrorists. In addition, labour centre offices are under surveillance and property is often destroyed, in particular regarding the KMU headquarters in Barangay Claro in Quezon City, Defend Jobs office in Quezon City and OLALIA-KMU office in Laguna.
- • The complainants also refer to the vilification of Lean Porquia, a KMU volunteer, by accusing him of recruiting rebels, as well as more broadly to intimidation of officers and members of workers’ unions in TMA Group Phils, F-Tech, PIGLAS Middleby Phils Corp-LIGA, Daiwa Seiko Phils, Sun Logistics Corp, Aichi Forge Phils and workers from OLALIA-KMU.
- 650. In relation to the above allegations, the complainants indicate that
they reported the recent cases of murder and other human rights violations among
KMU-affiliated unions to the CHR, the DOLE and the judiciary, but that there is very
slow progression of the proceedings to justly evaluate the apparent state-sponsored
scheme of silencing organized formations which criticize the administration’s
anti-worker policies. At the time of submitting these allegations, the complainants
indicate that no member of the military or police forces has been sanctioned or
penalized for human rights violations; instead, many were promoted or have retired. The
KMU, PAMANTIK and families of victims have also engaged the Administrative Order No. 35
mechanism at the Department of Justice to request an investigation into the “Bloody
Sunday” incidents and the killing of Dandy Miguel and argue that these killings should
not be dismissed merely on the basis of presumption of regularity of police action or on
arguments that those arrested fought back or that the killings were not labour-related.
Instead, they demand a fair and thorough investigation into all the actions of the
police and accountability for the perpetrators. The complainants submit that for
arrested and detained unionists, legal defence is a challenge, human rights lawyers are
being killed, the law is weaponized and the judicial system is compromised with judges
under duress of military coercion and threats of being killed for being independent. The
KMU raised these concerns with the Supreme Court Administrator and recommended reforms
on the rules of courts and guidelines in the issuance of arrest and search warrants. The
Supreme Court issued Administrative Circular No. 13 in July 2021 that requires the use
of body cameras during arrests and searches and restricts the power of Metro Manila
judges to issue search warrants on venues outside their jurisdiction. The KMU also filed
a petition questioning the constitutionality of the Anti-Terror Act of 2020 and a
complaint to the National Bureau of Investigation to look into state publications that
tag KMU leaders as terrorists.
- 651. On the basis of the above, the complainants allege that state
security forces continue to undermine freedom of association rights and flagrantly
violate the law, due process, civil rights and basic human rights of Filipino workers,
including through the assimilation of legitimate trade union activities with combat.
Even though the DOLE has argued that the killings among workers are not labor-related
and that remedies are available for workers’ groups in case of violations (such as the
Administrative Order 35 mechanism, the Guidelines on the conduct of state officials),
the problem lies with the lack of the rule of law, the implementation of guidelines and
whether the available mechanisms would prove to be impartial when the agencies involved
in the investigation belong to the NTF-ELCAC. The complainants allege that while the
Constitution, the laws, the courts and the guidelines are in place, state security
forces blatantly disrespect these institutions and the heavily-funded NTF-ELCAC has
become the main instrument of human rights abuses in the country, not persecuting armed
communists but unarmed civilians and legitimate organizations. The complainants
therefore argue that the Government failed to guarantee, uphold and protect workers’
fundamental rights to life, liberty, other basic human rights and freedom of
association. The fact that killings and other human rights abuses persisted and worsened
since the International Labour Conference in 2019 means that the Government has not
taken significant measures in curbing these abuses but, on the contrary, enforces
policies and bodies that pave way for violations of trade union and human rights. The
complainants call on the Government to end the repression and human rights violations
against trade unionists and their families.
C. The Government’s reply
C. The Government’s reply- 652. In its communication dated 30 September 2022, the Government
indicates that, following the May 2022 presidential elections, Government departments
and agencies that are in charge of addressing the Committee’s recommendations underwent
a number of structural changes. The Government affirms full respect for ILO labour
standards, recognizes the long-standing issues elevated to ILO supervisory mechanisms
and recalls its intention to objectively address these issues. It adds that it has
recently adopted a policy of open dialogue with various labour organizations, including
those affiliated with the complainants in this case, in order to obtain more precise
information on the numerous complaints of harassment, red-tagging and violence directed
at trade union members. Through this process of communication and dialogue, the
Government aims at working together with labour organizations to improve the environment
for the exercise of trade union rights. These actions complement developments in the
judiciary where the Supreme Court issued an administrative order expressly limiting the
effect of judicial warrants within the issuing judge’s territorial jurisdiction, so as
to address the widely criticized practice of Manila and Quezon City judges to issue
warrants that could be implemented in areas outside of their jurisdiction.
- 653. In relation to the cases concerning the murders of Antonio
Petalcorin, Emilio Rivera and Kagi Alimudin that were at the origin of this case, the
Government indicates that the newly launched e-warrant system aids in tracking suspects
who remain at large and that the police now implement the Simultaneous Anti-Criminality
Law Enforcement Operations, under which unserved warrants are served on a bi-monthly
basis. Accordingly, the Palomo Police Station in Davao City, which has jurisdiction over
the Petalcorin and Rivera cases is conducting continuous coordination with other law
enforcement units to locate and apprehend the suspects. The case of Alimudin, despite
not being classified as a case of extra-judicial killing based on the operational
guidelines of the Administrative Order No. 35, remains open for investigation in line
with regular criminal investigative procedures but the lack of material witnesses
continues to hamper the investigation.
- 654. Concerning the additional allegations submitted by the complainants
in March and June 2021, the Government claims that they pertain to incidents that are
distinct from those initially submitted in this case and should not be examined as part
of the case. It also affirms that many alleged incidents are at various stages of the
investigative, prosecutorial and judicial processes within fully functioning national
institutions. In particular, it indicates that the allegations of extra-judicial
killings have been raised by the Center for Trade Union and Human Rights and have been
under monitoring by regional tripartite monitoring bodies. Out of these cases, five are
under police investigation – the cases concerning Leonardo Escala, Alexander Ceballos,
Flora Gemola, Ronald Manlanat and Felipe Dacal-Dacal – and three are pending before the
courts or are being tried – the cases of reported killings of Ariel Diaz, Julius Broce
Barellano and the nine farmers known as “Sagay 9”. The Government states that in the
case of Ariel Diaz, based on a report of the Isabela Provincial Police Office from
August 2021, a case for murder was filed in court against one identified and several
unidentified suspects. According to the police, the motive for the crime was a land
dispute and the accused have an arrest warrant pending against them and are being
tracked. In the case of Julius Broce Barellano, a criminal case of murder was lodged
against the suspects at the local court of San Carlos City, Negros Occidental, who were
arrested and are currently detained. Regarding the Sagay farmers, a case of multiple
murder was filed against two identified and several unidentified individuals and are
pending at the Regional Trial Court Branch 73 in Sagay City, Negros Occidental.
- 655. Concerning other alleged cases of extra-judicial killings, illegal
detention and red-tagging raised by the complainants in March and June 2021, the
Government states that it is committed to monitoring these cases but due to the high
number of alleged incidents and the time that has elapsed since they occurred, the
Government will need reasonable time to secure accurate and relevant information in this
regard.
- 656. With regard to the additional allegations submitted by the
complainants in September 2021, the Government states that these refer to two additional
incidents of killings, namely that of Dandy Miguel and the Southern Luzon raids tagged
as “the Bloody Sunday”. The Government indicates that Dandy Miguel was shot on 28 March
2021 and his case was endorsed to the Department of Justice Inter-Agency Committee (IAC)
under Administrative Order No. 35 immediately after the incident, following which the
Department Secretary ordered the immediate creation of a Special Investigating Team, to
facilitate investigation and case build-up. In April 2022, case conferences were held by
the IAC during which the case of Dandy Miguel was extensively discussed and in reports
from April and September 2022, the Assistant State Prosecutor and Head of the IAC
Secretariat reported that the investigation in the case was ongoing.
- 657. Concerning “the Bloody Sunday” incident, the Government indicates
that it is the aftermath of simultaneous raids carried out by the police and the armed
forces in Southern Luzon, which were, according to the spokesperson of the police in
Region IV-A, conducted to serve search warrants for loose firearms and illegal
possession of explosives. Nine people died – Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion, Chai
Evangelista, Ariel Evangelista, Melvin Dasigao, Mark Bacasno, Abner Esto, Edward Esto,
Dumagat Puroy and Randy “Pulong” Dela Cruz. The IAC Secretariat reported in September
2022 that the case was being continuously monitored. The Government indicates, in
particular:
- • In January 2022, the Department of Justice issued a press statement indicating that the National Bureau of Investigation filed a complaint for murder against 17 officers and personnel associated with the Philippine National Police - Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (PNP-CIDG) in Region IV-A who were involved in the service of search warrants in Nasugbu, Batangas that led to the deaths of Ariel and Chai Evangelista.
- • Concerning the death of Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion, the Special Investigating Team recommended the filing of murder charges against certain law enforcement agents involved in the incident. Thereafter, a complaint against 17 identified policemen was filed with the prosecutor in Dasmariñas City, with Asuncion’s wife as the complainant.
- • In September 2022, the Department of Justice confirmed that at least 30 police officers will be indicted for the killings of labour leaders Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion and Ariel and Chai Evangelista. As for the other victims, the incidents are being investigated by the Special Investigating Team.
D. The Committee’s conclusions
D. The Committee’s conclusions- 658. The Committee recalls that the present case concerns allegations of
a deteriorating labour rights situation in the country, characterized by numerous
incidents of extra-judicial killings of trade union leaders and members, attempted
assassinations, illegal arrests and detention, red-tagging, harassment, intimidation and
threats against unionists, as well as allegations of trade union repression and
interference in union affairs, and the Government’s failure to adequately investigate
these cases and bring the perpetrators to justice, reinforcing the climate of impunity,
violence and insecurity with its damaging effect on the exercise of trade union
rights.
- 659. The Committee notes that a High-Level Tripartite Mission took place
in the country from 23 to 26 January 2023, as had been requested by the Conference
Committee on the Application of Standards in its June 2019 recommendations on the
application of Convention No. 87.
- 660. With regard to the initial allegations and the status of the cases
concerning the murders of Antonio “Dodong” Petalcorin, Emilio Rivera and Kagi Alimudin
Lucman (recommendation (a)), the Committee recalls that the murders took place in 2013
and that the Government has indicated on several occasions that they were, or continue
to be, investigated through the regular processes of criminal investigation and
prosecution. While taking due note of the Government’s indication that the three cases
continue to be under investigation and that a number of measures have been put in place
to facilitate the tracking of suspects who remain at large, including coordination
between the relevant law enforcement agencies, the Committee regrets to observe that no
real progress appears to have been made in bringing the perpetrators to justice in the
three cases. While further acknowledging the challenges of investigating and prosecuting
criminal behaviour that occurred almost ten years ago and where suspects remain at
large, the Committee must once again express its firm expectation that the perpetrators
in the mentioned cases will be brought to trial and convicted without further delay, so
as to avoid impunity for these serious crimes. The Committee urges the Government to
continue to make every effort in this regard and to keep it informed of any progress
made.
- 661. Concerning the additional allegations communicated by the ITF, the
UMA and the NFSW-FGT in March and June 2021 (recommendations (b) and (c)), the Committee
recalls that these refer to a policy of trade union repression and criminalization which
has resulted in practice in serious violations of human and trade union rights,
including 18 cases of extra-judicial killings of trade union members and leaders since
2016, illegal arrests, detention and false criminal charges against more than 100
workers, human rights activists and unionists, as well as numerous incidents of
intimidation, harassment, red-tagging and threats against trade union members and
leaders, most of which were characterized by some degree of involvement of state agents,
in particular members of the police, the armed forces or other organizations under their
control. The Committee notes the Government’s indication that many of the alleged
incidents are at various stages of the investigative, prosecutorial and judicial
processes in fully functioning national institutions, including the regional tripartite
monitoring bodies. In particular, the Government informs that five cases of alleged
killings are under police investigation – the cases concerning Leonardo Escala,
Alexander Ceballos, Flora Gemola, Ronald Manlanat and Felipe Dacal-Dacal – and three are
pending before the courts or trials on charges of murder are ongoing – the cases of
Ariel Diaz, Julius Broce Barellano and the nine Sagay farmers. The Committee observes
that the Government does not provide any concrete information on the other allegations
raised by the complainants, in particular on two additional cases of extra-judicial
killings and numerous instances of illegal detention and red-tagging (see 396th Report,
October 2021, paragraphs 515–517), but indicates its commitment to monitor these cases,
while also emphasizing the challenges it faces (for example high number of incidents,
time that has elapsed).
- 662. Taking due note of the above developments reported by the
Government, the Committee recalls that it has previously expressed deep concern at the
gravity of the allegations made, as well as at their repeated and prolonged nature,
resulting in a climate of violence and impunity with an extremely damaging effect on the
legitimate exercise of trade union rights in the country. In this context and further
recalling that the mere absence of a labour dispute or trade union campaign does not
necessarily preclude any connection of the crime with the exercise of trade union
activities, membership or office [see Compilation of decisions of the Committee on
Freedom of Association, sixth edition, 2018, para. 92], the Committee firmly expects the
ongoing investigations and judicial proceedings to give full consideration to any
possible direct or indirect relation that the violent acts may have with trade union
activities of the victims. The Committee firmly expects the Government to prioritize
investigations into all of the above serious incidents and the perpetrators of violence
against trade unionists to be identified and brought to justice, irrespective of whether
they are private persons or state agents, so as to combat impunity and prevent the
repetition of such acts. The Committee urges the Government to provide updated
information on any progress made, including in relation to the alleged extra-judicial
killing of Jose Jerry Catalogo and Antonio “Cano” Arellano, for which the Government has
not yet provided any details. The Committee also urges the Government to ensure the
immediate release of any detained trade unionists, should their arrest or detention be
connected to the legitimate exercise of their trade union rights.
- 663. Regarding the additional information provided by the complainants in
September 2021, the Committee observes that it concerns allegations of an increase in
trade union repression and deprivation of workers’ right to organize since 2017, with a
serious impact on the trade union movement in the country. In particular, the Committee
observes that the complainants denounce the killing of six unionists – Danny Boy
Bautista, Reynaldo Malaborbor, Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion, Melvin Dasigao, Mark Lee
Bacasno and Dandy Miguel – and six other activists, as well as the attempted
assassination of four other union leaders and members, during raids conducted by the
military and the police between October 2018 and March 2021, which the complainants
argue are part of a state policy to prevent workers from organizing and to hinder
genuine trade unionism in the country. The Government, for its part, does not address
the broader allegations of a state policy of trade union repression but provides updates
on the alleged killings of trade unionists and activists. In this regard, the Committee
notes the Government’s indication that the killing of Dandy Miguel on 28 March 2021 was
endorsed to the IAC under Administrative Order No. 35 immediately after the incident,
that a Special Investigating Team was created to facilitate investigation and that the
case build-up and investigation are ongoing. The Committee further notes that the
Government provides details on “the Bloody Sunday” incident referring to it as
simultaneous raids carried out by the police and the armed forces in Southern Luzon,
which, according to the police, were conducted to serve search warrants for loose
firearms and illegal possession of explosives and during which nine people died –
Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion, Chai Evangelista, Ariel Evangelista, Melvin Dasigao, Mark
Bacasno, Abner Esto, Edward Esto, Dumagat Puroy and Randy “Pulong” Dela Cruz. In this
respect, the Committee observes the Government’s indication that, following a complaint
of the National Bureau of Investigation, at least 30 police officers will be indicted
for the killings of labour leaders Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion and Ariel and Chai
Evangelista and that the other incidents are investigated by the Special Investigating
Team.
- 664. In light of the latest allegations, the Committee must once again
express deep concern at the repeated and serious allegations of killings or attempted
killings of trade unionists and must recall that the right to life is a fundamental
prerequisite for the exercise of the rights contained in Convention No. 87 [see
Compilation, para. 81]. While further taking due note of the investigations undertaken
and indictments to be filed against a number of state officials, as reported by the
Government, the Committee also observes the complainants’ concerns that despite having
notified the CHR, the DOLE and the judiciary of the above incidents, there is very slow
progress in addressing these allegations. In these circumstances, the Committee recalls
that the killing, disappearance or serious injury of trade union leaders and trade
unionists requires the institution of independent judicial inquiries in order to shed
full light, at the earliest date, on the facts and the circumstances in which such
actions occurred and, in this way, to the extent possible, determine where
responsibilities lie, punish the guilty parties and prevent the repetition of similar
events [see Compilation, para. 94]. Furthermore, the mere fact of initiating an
investigation does not mark the end of the Government’s work; rather, the Government
must do all within its power to ensure that such investigations lead to the
identification and punishment of the perpetrators. In view of the above, the Committee
urges the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that all alleged instances
of killings and attempted killings reported by the complainants in September 2021 are
fully investigated by an independent mechanism so as to identify and punish the
perpetrators and to report on the progress made in this regard. Observing that no
information was provided in relation to the incidents concerning the killing of Danny
Boy Bautista and Reynaldo Malaborbor, the Committee urges the Government to provide
details on any measures taken to address and investigate these incidents.
- 665. The Committee further observes from the additional information that
the complainants allege institutional criminalization of trade union activities,
translated in practice by surveillance, threats and arbitrary arrests and detention of
trade unionists based on false criminal charges and fake evidence, and denounce a
continued policy of vilification and anti-union propaganda by the military, and
red-tagging of the KMU and other unions as terrorist organizations, which lead to
widespread threats and persistent harassment, raiding of homes and offices, fake
surrenders as supporters of the NPA, forced disaffiliation and other forms of
intervention in trade union affairs, all of which prevent workers from fully exercising
their right to organize. In this regard, the complainants provide details on the
circumstances leading to the arrest and detention on false criminal charges of around
76 unionists between February 2018 and March 2021, some of whom were later released on
bail but continue to have cases pending against them before the courts, and elaborate on
at least 14 other situations in which numerous unionists from various KMU-affiliated
organizations active in several enterprises were subjected to different forms of
harassment, intervention in union affairs and forced disaffiliation as a result of
accusations of being associated with or supporting a terrorist organization. Finally,
the Committee notes that the complainants denounce violent suppression of workers’
strikes and point to several instances between 2017 and 2019, in which the armed forces,
the police and private security personnel resorted to the use of force (assaults,
beatings with batons, metal bars and truncheons, throwing of stones and the use of
formalin) to disperse striking workers in different sectors, resulting in injuries to
numerous workers and the arrest and detention of more than 100 workers and union
members, some of whom continue to have cases pending against them.
- 666. Observing the lack of Government information in this regard, the
Committee must express deep concern both at the gravity of these additional allegations
and at their repeated and prolonged nature, which seem to have extremely damaging
effects on the legitimate exercise of trade union rights in the country, as described in
detail by the complainants. The Committee also observes with deep concern that,
according to the complainants, the direct perpetrators of most of the above incidents
are state agents, often in collaboration with private security personnel from the
concerned companies, and that the violence and purposeful targeting of trade unionists
are allegedly conducted in the framework of a state-sponsored scheme to silence
legitimate organizations, including trade unions. In these circumstances and given the
multitude of serious allegations made, the Committee must recall that the environment of
fear induced by threats to the life of trade unionists has inevitable repercussions on
the exercise of trade union activities, and the exercise of these activities is possible
only in a context of respect for basic human rights and in an atmosphere free of
violence, pressure and threats of any kind [see Compilation, para. 116]. Concerning the
complainants’ concerns as to the alleged criminalization of trade union activities and
the assimilation of legitimate trade unions with terrorist organizations, the Committee
recalls that blanket linkages of trade unions to an insurgency have a stigmatizing
effect and often place union leaders and members in a situation of extreme insecurity.
Allegations of criminal conduct should not be used to harass trade unionists by reason
of their union membership or activities. It is not possible for a stable industrial
relations system to function harmoniously in the country as long as trade unionists are
subject to arrests and detentions. The criminal prosecution and conviction to
imprisonment of trade union leaders by reason of their trade union activities are not
conducive to a harmonious and stable industrial relations climate [see Compilation,
paras 93, 80, 127 and 155]. Furthermore, respect for the principles of freedom of
association requires that the public authorities exercise great restraint in relation to
intervention in the internal affairs of trade unions and any coercion of workers or
trade union officers to revoke their union membership would be contrary to these
principles. Finally, regarding the allegations of violent dispersal of strikes, the
Committee wishes to recall that while workers and their organizations have an obligation
to respect the law of the land, the intervention by security forces in strike situations
should be limited strictly to the maintenance of public order. The use of police for
strike-breaking purposes is an infringement of trade union rights [see Compilation,
paras 933 and 931].
- 667. In line with the above, the Committee urges the Government to
provide detailed and concrete observations on the serious additional allegations of
trade union repression and criminalization of trade union activities reported by the KMU
in September 2021. The Committee urges the Government to ensure that all alleged
instances of physical violence, arrests, detention, threats and intimidation are rapidly
and thoroughly investigated and perpetrators of violence against unionists identified
and brought to justice, including when they are state agents, so as to combat impunity
and prevent the repetition of such acts. The Committee urges the Government to ensure
that any pending criminal charges are dropped and any detained trade unionists
immediately released, should their arrest or detention be connected to the legitimate
exercise of their trade union rights. The Committee also urges the Government to take
the necessary measures to address the alleged coercion of trade unionists to withdraw
their union membership, so as to prevent the repetition of such incidents, and to ensure
that workers’ strikes, as long as they remain peaceful, are not met with
disproportionate use of force by the police or the military.
- 668. Finally, with regard to the climate of violence and insecurity
previously alleged in this case (recommendation (d)) and further denounced in the latest
information from the complainants, the Committee notes that the Government recognizes
the long-standing issues pending before the Committee and indicates its intention to
objectively address these. In particular, the Committee takes note of the Government’s
indication that it has adopted a policy to engage in dialogue with labour organizations,
including those affiliated with the complainants in this case, in order to obtain more
precise information on the numerous complaints of harassment, red-tagging and violence
directed at trade union members, which, according to the Government, aims at improving
the environment for the exercise of trade union rights in the country. The Government
also indicates that, in order to address the widely criticized practice of some judges
to issue warrants that could be implemented outside their jurisdiction, the Supreme
Court issued an administrative order expressly limiting the effect of judicial warrants
within the issuing judge’s territorial jurisdiction. The Committee further observes the
information provided by the Government to the Committee of Experts on the Application of
Conventions and Recommendations, indicating that, in its judgment from December 2021,
the Supreme Court declared that the Anti-Terrorism Act was not, as a whole,
unconstitutional but nullified two of its provisions, including one which allowed for an
overly vague interpretation of what constitutes terrorism so that it would no longer
include broad references to advocacy, protest, dissent, stoppage of work, industrial or
mass action, and other similar exercises of civil and political rights.
- 669. Taking due note of these measures and initiatives, the Committee
wishes to recall that a free and independent trade union movement can only develop in a
climate free of violence, threats and pressure, and it is for the Government to
guarantee that trade union rights can develop normally [see Compilation, para. 87]. In
line with the above, the Committee urges the Government to do everything in its power,
including through direct, genuine and constructive engagement with labour organizations,
to adequately address and remedy the extremely serious allegations that trade union
violence and repression are conducted in the framework of a state-sponsored scheme to
silence legitimate trade unions, allegations which, if found to be true, would seriously
hinder the development of a genuine trade union movement in the country. In this
respect, the Committee urges the Government to reinforce its efforts in combating
violence against trade unionists by designing and implementing any necessary measures to
this effect, including clear guidance and instructions to all state officials and full
operationalization of national monitoring and investigative mechanisms, so as to prevent
recurring incidents of violence against trade union members and leaders and to ensure
that they are not indiscriminately linked to insurgency or other paramilitary groups,
considering the stigmatizing effect this may have on the exercise of legitimate trade
union activities.
- 670. The Committee draws the particular attention of the Governing Body
to the extreme seriousness and urgency of this case.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 671. In the light of its foregoing interim conclusions, the Committee
invites the Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a)
Recalling that the murders of Antonio “Dodong” Petalcorin, Emilio Rivera and Kagi
Alimudin Lucman took place in 2013 and that the Government has indicated that they
were, or continue to be, investigated through the regular processes of criminal
investigation and prosecution, the Committee must once again express its firm
expectation that the perpetrators in the mentioned cases will be brought to trial
and convicted without further delay, so as to avoid impunity for these serious
crimes. The Committee urges the Government to continue to make every effort in this
regard and to keep it informed of any progress made.
- (b) With regard to the
allegations of trade union repression reported by the ITF, the UMA and the NFSW-FGT
in March and June 2021 (allegations of extra-judicial killings, illegal arrests,
detention, false criminal charges, intimidation, harassment, red-tagging and threats
against trade union members and leaders), the Committee firmly expects the ongoing
investigations and judicial proceedings to give full consideration to any possible
direct or indirect relation that the violent acts may have with trade union
activities of the victims. The Committee firmly expects the Government to prioritize
investigations into all of the serious incidents and the perpetrators of violence
against trade unionists to be identified and brought to justice, irrespective of
whether they are private persons or state agents, so as to combat impunity and
prevent the repetition of such acts. The Committee urges the Government to provide
updated information on any progress made, including in relation to the alleged
extra-judicial killing of Jose Jerry Catalogo and Antonio “Cano” Arellano, for which
the Government has not yet provided any details.
- (c) The Committee urges the
Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that all alleged instances of
killings and attempted killings reported by the complainants in September 2021 are
fully investigated by an independent mechanism so as to identify and punish the
perpetrators and to report on the progress made in this regard. Observing that no
information was provided in relation to the incidents concerning the killing of
Danny Boy Bautista and Reynaldo Malaborbor, the Committee urges the Government to
provide details on any measures taken to address and investigate these
incidents.
- (d) The Committee urges the Government to provide detailed and
concrete observations on the serious additional allegations of trade union
repression and criminalization of trade union activities reported by the KMU in
September 2021. The Committee urges the Government to ensure that all alleged
instances of physical violence, arrests, detention, threats and intimidation are
rapidly and thoroughly investigated and perpetrators of violence against unionists
identified and brought to justice, including when they are state agents, so as to
combat impunity and prevent the repetition of such acts.
- (e) The Committee
urges the Government to ensure that any pending criminal charges are dropped and any
detained trade unionists immediately released, should their arrest or detention be
connected to the legitimate exercise of their trade union rights.
- (f) The
Committee also urges the Government to take the necessary measures to address the
alleged coercion of trade unionists to withdraw their union membership, so as to
prevent the repetition of such incidents, and to ensure that workers’ strikes, as
long as they remain peaceful, are not met with disproportionate use of force by the
police or the military.
- (g) Finally, emphasizing the Government’s
responsibility with regard to investigations into allegations of violence against
workers who are organizing or otherwise defending workers’ interests, the Committee
urges the Government to do everything in its power, including through direct,
genuine and constructive engagement with labour organizations, to adequately address
and remedy the extremely serious allegations that trade union violence and
repression are conducted in the framework of a state-sponsored scheme to silence
legitimate trade unions, allegations which, if found to be true, would seriously
hinder the development of a genuine trade union movement in the country. In this
respect, the Committee urges the Government to reinforce its efforts in combating
violence against trade unionists by designing and implementing any necessary
measures to this effect, including clear guidance and instructions to all state
officials and full operationalization of national monitoring and investigative
mechanisms, so as to prevent recurring incidents of violence against trade union
members and leaders and to ensure that they are not indiscriminately linked to
insurgency or other paramilitary groups, considering the stigmatizing effect this
may have on the exercise of legitimate trade union activities.
- (h) The
Committee draws the special attention of the Governing Body to the extreme
seriousness and urgency of this case.