Carlos H. Conde

Archive for CyberDyaryo

To alleged AFP-Abu ‘collusion’: Malacanang urged to create ‘Davide-like’ commission

By Carlos H. Conde
Cyberdyaryo
Published: Aug. 28, 2001

DAVAO CITY - Malacanang should create an independent fact-finding body to investigate the allegation that some elements within the armed forces have been colluding with the Abu Sayyaf. The creation of such a body, the proponents say, should settle the issue of partiality and grandstanding that bedevil the investigations being conducted by separate committees of both houses of Congress.

Fr. Eliseo Mercado Jr. OMI, a leading Mindanao peace advocate, thinks that the independent body similar to the Davide Commission that investigated the series of coup attempts by renegade soldiers in the ’80s would be “the best thing” to get to the bottom of the story.

“It’s high time to get a Davide-type commission to look into this plague (alleged collusion),” the priest said.

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Posted on August 28, 2001, and filed under CyberDyaryo, Stories | Comments

ARMM plebiscite: Is Misuari finished?

By Carlos H. Conde
Cyberdyaryo
Published: Aug. 15, 2001

DAVAO CITY–Somewhere in Jolo, Nur Misuari is reportedly sulking. For good reason.

Last week, Malacanang stripped him of the chairmanship of the Southern Philippines Council for Peace and Development, the de facto governing body over the 14 cities and 15 provinces that comprise the Special Zone of Peace and Development (Szopad), itself a de facto political unit.

Immediately after his firing (”unceremoniously,” say Misuari’s people in the Moro National Liberation Front), there was talk that Misuari would give up his last political card � the governorship of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

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Posted on August 15, 2001, and filed under CyberDyaryo, Stories | Comments

Mindanao peace advocates: ARMM plebiscite today ‘an exercise in futility’

By Carlos H. Conde
Cyberdyaryo
Published: Aug. 14, 2001

WHEN voters from the four provinces of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) troop to the polls today for a referendum on the fate of the New ARMM Organic Act (Republic Act 9054), they will be deciding on a law that violates the letter and spirit of the 1996 Final Peace Agreement signed by the government and the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF).

Moreover, the ARMM constituents will be deciding on a law that is a product of indifference, ignorance and political manipulation in Congress, even among Moro congressmen.

The referendum today — which will ask ARMM residents, as well as residents of the 11 provinces and 14 cities that are not within the non-ARMM but are within the Special Zone of Peace and Development (Szopad), if they agree to RA 9054 that amended the original organic act (RA 6734) — is, thus, an exercise in futility that has far-reaching implications on peace in Mindanao.

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Posted on August 14, 2001, and filed under CyberDyaryo, Stories | Comments

Entering the war zone: ‘I saw nothing but rage’

By Carlos H. Conde
Cyberdyaryo
Published: May 3, 2001

It looked like a scene from “Under Fire”, an ’80s movie on the Nicaraguan revolution. The remains of burned-out cars on the usually bustling avenue spoke of the violence that had just transpired there. Policemen and soldiers were resting by the wayside, ready to face another onslaught from the Estrada loyalists who had engaged them in a running street battle since morning.

Signs, billboards and shop windows were broken. Security guards of commercial establishments stood behind closed doors, peering through shattered glass windows and iron grills. Stores were closed, personnel opening their doors cautiously, looking left and right, as if they were afraid something terrible might come at any moment.

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Posted on May 3, 2001, and filed under CyberDyaryo, Stories | Comments

The Left assesses GMA’s first 100 days

By Carlos H. Conde
Cyberdyaryo
May 1, 2001

THE Philippines has been thrust into the realm of the surreal, validating once again what a writer once said–that this country is a perfect setting for a Gabriel Garcia Marquez novel.

Ironic is too tame a word to describe the events that transpired in the week just past, especially on Sunday, the 100th day of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s administration.

On that day, there were indications that Malaca�ang had finally admitted to itself that the crisis spawned by the arrest of former President Joseph Estrada on April 26 was much more serious than initially thought. Amid denials of rumors that some generals had defected to the Estrada camp, the Armed Forces high command held a closed-door meeting for hours.

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Posted on May 1, 2001, and filed under CyberDyaryo, Stories | Comments

AFP violates own rules of engagement, child-abuse law in Sulu

By Carlos H. Conde
Cyberdyaryo
Published: Sept. 28, 2000

On top of the alleged human rights violations that have been leveled against it in the wake of the military’s assault on Sulu, the Armed Forces of the Philippines has also been violating its own rules of engagement, as well as the law that protects the rights and welfare of children.

This was the contention of Commission of Human Rights commissioner Nasser Marohomsalic during the Ciudad Fernandina forum in Greenhills on Wednesday.

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Posted on September 28, 2000, and filed under CyberDyaryo, Stories | Comments

 
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