Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Editorial: Constitutional duty of Congress

Former solicitor general Florin Hilbay posted a suggestion on Twitter last Sunday: “Here’s an idea: 300 lawyers signing on to an SC petition to require Congress to comply with its constitutional duty to convene & deliberate.”

That the possibility of a mass petition like this is raised at all is a reflection of the startling position that Congress has taken in the wake of President Duterte’s declaration of martial law in Mindanao. House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III quickly, as in less than 24 hours after the declaration of martial law, said that there was no need to jointly convene, deliberate and vote on Mr. Duterte’s action. They said a joint session would be necessary only when legislators disagreed with the declaration—the implication being that every single legislator was in support of it.
Was there a caucus to hear out individual voices, or to conduct even a straw vote on the matter? There was none.

On one of the last-resort actions of a president—so grave that the framers of the Constitution deliberately planted multiple safeguards around it to prevent its reckless use—the coequal branch of government mandated to perform the initial scrutiny of it just basically decided to roll over and play dead. So much for checks and balances, when the first line of defense against the possible abuse of martial law powers—an immediate review of its necessity by the elected representatives of the people—disintegrates at first blush with hardly a whimper. Sen. Tito Sotto perfectly exemplifies this earnest, simple-minded sense of surrender: “Why would they want a joint session when it is not necessary, not needed, not really called for?” he said.

Martial law in the whole of Mindanao, despite the fighting with the Maute extremists confined only in Marawi City for now, has triggered questions about the decision-making process that Mr. Duterte and his national security team employed in making the choice. The Maute attacks are clearly a case of terrorism, and less clearly the invasion or rebellion that the Constitution specified as the only two reasons for martial law to be imposed. The military has also repeatedly stated that the situation is under control: That was the assessment given by Armed Forces Chief of Staff Eduardo Año to Mr. Duterte in Moscow—only to be contradicted by Palace pronouncements that appear to paint a direr, more convoluted picture of the situation, such as the President conflating the conflict with his centerpiece war on drugs. It also turned out that Mr. Duterte was grossly misinformed about two alleged incidents the Palace had cited as triggers for the martial law declaration: The local chief of police who was supposedly beheaded by the terrorists turned out to be very much alive, and the news that a hospital was taken over by the terrorists has been proved false.

Congress is supposed to ask the hard questions and do due diligence in this regard, but why is it shirking its constitutional responsibility? Its response appears to have hardened Mr. Duterte some more; he has announced that he would ignore the Supreme Court, and that “until the police and the armed forces say the Philippines is safe, this martial law will continue.” And yet the Constitution says that the Supreme Court has the power to review the factual basis of the President’s decision “in an appropriate proceeding filed by any citizen,” and that “civilian authority is, at all times, supreme over the military.”

Former solicitor general Florin Hilbay posted a suggestion on Twitter last Sunday: “Here’s an idea: 300 lawyers signing on to an SC petition to require Congress to comply with its constitutional duty to convene & deliberate.”

That the possibility of a mass petition like this is raised at all is a reflection of the startling position that Congress has taken in the wake of President Duterte’s declaration of martial law in Mindanao. House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III quickly, as in less than 24 hours after the declaration of martial law, said that there was no need to jointly convene, deliberate and vote on Mr. Duterte’s action. They said a joint session would be necessary only when legislators disagreed with the declaration—the implication being that every single legislator was in support of it.
Was there a caucus to hear out individual voices, or to conduct even a straw vote on the matter? There was none.

On one of the last-resort actions of a president—so grave that the framers of the Constitution deliberately planted multiple safeguards around it to prevent its reckless use—the coequal branch of government mandated to perform the initial scrutiny of it just basically decided to roll over and play dead. So much for checks and balances, when the first line of defense against the possible abuse of martial law powers—an immediate review of its necessity by the elected representatives of the people—disintegrates at first blush with hardly a whimper. Sen. Tito Sotto perfectly exemplifies this earnest, simple-minded sense of surrender: “Why would they want a joint session when it is not necessary, not needed, not really called for?” he said.

Martial law in the whole of Mindanao, despite the fighting with the Maute extremists confined only in Marawi City for now, has triggered questions about the decision-making process that Mr. Duterte and his national security team employed in making the choice. The Maute attacks are clearly a case of terrorism, and less clearly the invasion or rebellion that the Constitution specified as the only two reasons for martial law to be imposed. The military has also repeatedly stated that the situation is under control: That was the assessment given by Armed Forces Chief of Staff Eduardo Año to Mr. Duterte in Moscow—only to be contradicted by Palace pronouncements that appear to paint a direr, more convoluted picture of the situation, such as the President conflating the conflict with his centerpiece war on drugs. It also turned out that Mr. Duterte was grossly misinformed about two alleged incidents the Palace had cited as triggers for the martial law declaration: The local chief of police who was supposedly beheaded by the terrorists turned out to be very much alive, and the news that a hospital was taken over by the terrorists has been proved false.

Congress is supposed to ask the hard questions and do due diligence in this regard, but why is it shirking its constitutional responsibility? Its response appears to have hardened Mr. Duterte some more; he has announced that he would ignore the Supreme Court, and that “until the police and the armed forces say the Philippines is safe, this martial law will continue.” And yet the Constitution says that the Supreme Court has the power to review the factual basis of the President’s decision “in an appropriate proceeding filed by any citizen,” and that “civilian authority is, at all times, supreme over the military.”

For good measure, Mr. Duterte did also mention Congress as among those he would ignore. But he needn’t have bothered as Congress appears intent on making itself irrelevant. (At this writing, however, it seems to have bestirred itself and is making the necessary noises.) In Marcos’ martial law, Congress was padlocked. This time, is Congress padlocking itself?

source:  Philippine Daily Inquirer

Monday, May 29, 2017

SISYPHUS’ LAMENT: 10 things Duterte can’t do with martial law


Is what you are supporting or protesting actually martial law?

In martial law, our military temporarily governs a hostile area civilian leaders cannot. It goes far beyond troops and checkpoints—the president may deploy these anytime.

If rebels took over Marawi City and the mayor fled, a general may replace him. President Ferdinand Marcos governed the entire country as commander in chief by virtue of General Order No. 1 (1972).

Ex parte Milligan (US Supreme Court, 1866) rejected this extreme definition: “when war exists… (a commander may) substitute military force for and to the exclusion of the laws, and punish all persons as he thinks right and proper.” Such “destroys every guarantee of the Constitution.”

Similarly, we added many protections after Marcos:

1. Rebellion. Our 1987 Constitution allows martial law only “In case of invasion or rebellion, when the public safety requires it.” The Maute Group raised IS (Islamic State) flags in Marawi City. The constitutional law gods—former dean Pacifico Agabin and retired justice Vicente V. Mendoza—accept that rebels tried to take our territory to form a new state.

2. Actual rebellion. But Milligan and our 2000 Zamora case require actual rebellion, not just threat. Thus, former president Fidel V. Ramos argues it should be limited to parts of Mindanao. Sen. Franklin Drilon opposes expanding it to the Visayas or Luzon.

3. 60 days only. Martial law now lasts 60 days only, extendable by Congress.

4. Congress open. The Constitution bars “supplant(ing) the functioning of the civil courts or legislative assemblies.” No padlocking the Senate.

5. Courts open. Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno ordered courts to stay open. Military tribunals may not try civilians where courts function, unlike in 1973, in the case of Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr.

6. No seizures. Based on the 2006 Randy David case, only Congress may order “taking over of privately owned public utility.”

7. Rights stay. The Constitution is clear: “A state of martial law does not suspend the operation of the Constitution.” Free speech and all rights stay. But you cannot make bomb jokes at airports even without martial law, so do not post troop movements on Facebook.

8. No warrantless arrests, searches. Senior Associate Justice Antonio Carpio stressed that martial law in Maguindanao in 2009 (2012 Fortun case) did not allow warrantless arrests, citing the 1988 Aberca vs Ver case.

But when the “privilege of the writ of habeas corpus” is suspended, one cannot question detention for a rebellion case. The government must file charges in court in three days or release you. You may post bail.

In a Department of Defense memo dated May 24, implicitly citing the Constitution, martial law likewise does not allow warrantless searches. But the Supreme Court allows exceptions to getting warrants even without martial law, such as when a crime is in progress.

9. No replacing local government. The president controls the entire national government but only has “supervision” over local governments. Arguably, he cannot replace local officials where they still function, undermining one’s right to elect leaders.

The Constitution allows courts to nullify “grave abuse of discretion,” arguably, like replacing the governor of Batanes after a Marawi siege.

10. Civilian supremacy. The Constitution commands: “Civilian authority is, at all times, supreme over the military. The Armed Forces… is the protector of the people.”
So does martial law today grant any power beyond governing a hostile area? No—as the Constitution’s framers intended.

Shake off the great psychological impact of martial law. Everything you supported or protested last week is not martial law. The extraordinary power was declared but not yet used—which happened in the Fortun case. Not even the mayor of Marawi City was replaced. No one is detained for rebellion.
So are you supporting or protesting something within the president’s normal powers, not even subject to the 60-day limit? Or something unconstitutional even with martial law, meaning you are fighting the wrong fight?

NEWSSTAND: Why does the President misremember his oath?

When President Duterte arrived from Moscow, a day after he imposed martial law on all of Mindanao, he gave a speech explaining the rationale for his exercise of extraordinary power and then conducted a news conference. In response to a question about the rules of engagement now in place in Mindanao, he gave an extended answer, which included the following statement:

“You know, I have always maintained that my duty, my sacred duty to preserve and defend the Filipino, does not emanate from any constitutional restriction.”

“It is in my oath of office. I beg to disagree with anyone. In this oath of office which I promised to God and to the people that I will protect and defend the country.”

(I am using the official transcript provided by the Presidential Communications Operations Office.)
I thought the President’s recollection of his oath was curious, to say the least. The oath of office is provided, word for word, in Article VII of the Constitution:

“Section 5. Before they enter on the execution of their office, the President, the Vice-President, or the Acting President shall take the following oath or affirmation:

“‘I do solemnly swear [or affirm] that I will faithfully and conscientiously fulfill my duties as President [or Vice-President or Acting President] of the Philippines, preserve and defend its Constitution, execute its laws, do justice to every man, and consecrate myself to the service of the Nation. So help me God.’ [In case of affirmation, last sentence will be omitted].”

This is the same formulation of the oath as it was first provided in the 1935 Constitution (and copied in the 1973 Constitution). The framers of the 1987 Constitution deliberately used it to invoke tradition and recall history. As for the hallowed phrase “preserve and defend,” it is used to refer to the Constitution itself.

But President Duterte’s impromptu remarks suggest that he remembers his oath differently: At first he talks about his duty to “preserve and defend the Filipino,” and then later talks about his duty to “protect and defend the country.”  Throughout his entire extended answer, the President did not in fact reference the need to “preserve and defend” the Constitution. Indeed, he asserted that his “sacred duty … does not emanate from any constitutional restriction.”

This is a worrying choice of words, especially in the dimming light of his pronouncements after that news conference. He is expressly pledged to “preserve and defend the Constitution,” but since then he has promised not to follow any ruling from the Supreme Court or any vote by Congress regarding his declaration of martial law; he has encouraged the soldiers doing the fighting against the Abu Sayyaf and the Maute Group (the terrorist groups trying to catch the attention of a terror network better called the Daesh) by telling them they can arrest anyone without warrant or rape as many as three women (each?), if they want. I realize that last encouragement was said as a sick joke, but we need to ask ourselves: Why is the person charged with the sacred duty to preserve and defend the Constitution the first to encourage an assault on the Bill of Rights?

To be sure, in the prepared remarks he read at the airport, the President did reference respect for the Constitution: “It is our Constitutional mandate to enforce the law and provide security. It is our Constitutional duty to ensure that every family, every community, all Filipinos, are assured to live in peace and harmony.” The speech he read at the Philippine Military Academy graduation last March also called on the country’s new military officers to pledge loyalty “to the flag and the Constitution.”

It is when he goes off-script that he gives short shrift to the Constitution. Why is that?
Let’s accept the first premise of his (implied) argument for martial law: He is called to fulfill his oath of office. But his oath requires him to serve the nation, to do justice to every man, to execute the laws, and (this duty takes pride of place) to preserve and defend the Constitution. That means respecting the role Court and Congress must perform, not corrupting the military as “the protector of the people and the State,” and exhorting everyone to follow the law. He is not supposed to break it.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

Get Real : How can Marcos’ martial law be ‘good’?




Reader, there have been so many discussions in the print and broadcast media about the pros and cons of imposing martial law in Mindanao, especially the legal and constitutional aspects.  I leave it to the lawyers to discuss these, but I do have an opinion on related matters to share with you, not necessarily in the order of importance.

First, on whether martial law is the answer:

  1. I beg to differ with President Duterte’s assessment that martial law under the dictator Ferdinand Marcos was “good”. The economy collapsed, crime went up, real wages went down, corruption became world-class, extrajudicial killings were at their highest (until this administration). Not to mention torture and disappearances. If that is good, I don’t know what bad is.

  1. Marcos’ martial law failed to address the peace and order problems that were the articulated reasons for its declaration—as evidenced by the fact that the communist and the Moro problems are still with us today. On this basis alone, how can Marcos’ martial law be considered “good”?

  1. Mr. Duterte says his martial law will be harsh. But the 1987 Constitution has safeguards against martial law, because we learned from the Marcos experience. That means Marcos’ martial law was measurably harsher. And it did not succeed.

Next, let’s tackle the question of whether the Islamic State threat is real (the reason President Duterte hurried back—to save the Filipino people from this threat).

  1. There can be no doubt that the threat is real. Maria Ressa, who has written two books on terrorism—“Seeds of Terror: An Eyewitness Account of Al-Qaeda’s Newest Center of Operations in Southeast Asia” in 2003 and “From Bin Laden to Facebook” in 2013—has been pointing out the Filipino connections to the terrorist networks and hoisting the red danger flags for years.

  1. Then there is the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research, with Dr. Rommel Banlaoi as executive director and former chief superintendent and top intelligence officer Rodolfo “Boogie” Mendoza as president, who also have been pointing at the dangers, especially since 2012.
  1. So why did the government not take notice? Well, Reader, you have to admit that when President Duterte left for Russia, he had in tow both the AFP chief of staff, Gen. Eduardo Año, and the PNP chief, Director General Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa. Obviously, they thought everything was well in hand, and the so-called crisis caught them by surprise. Otherwise, there would have been complete staff work on its implementation at the ready.

  1. Problem of intelligence? Oh, I think the intelligence was there. But I also think that the police and the military are not properly coordinated, and the intelligence people have difficulty communicating with the leadership. Then there is the political problem: When a new dispensation comes in, says Banlaoi, it has to have its “katropa” along. So add to kaibigan, kaklase, kabarilan this new sign of power: katropa. If you are not katropa, your memos don’t mean a thing. Finally, there is the possibility that the war on drugs put the war on terror a far second, at least for the police.

But, dear Reader, the legislative branch seems to have its problems, too.

The  1987 Constitution is very clear that within 24 hours following a proclamation (of martial law) or a suspension (of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus), Congress shall convene, without need of a call.  This was included in the Constitution to make sure that what Marcos did—i.e., close the doors of Congress to prevent a meeting—would never happen. But now Congress, as a sign of its “trust” in the President (notably  Senators Sotto and Ejercito, Speaker Alvarez, Senate President Pimentel) and forgetting the system of checks and balances in our democracy, seems prepared to accept his action, even without convening or an explanation.

So what do we have?  An executive and a rubber-stamp legislature with problems on upholding the rule of law?

The Supreme Court, our last bastion: no rubber stamp, we hope.