Imee Marcos: No to anti- subversion law’s revival
>> Tuesday, August 27, 2019
EDITORIAL
Sen. Imee Marcos, whose
father, the late President Ferdinand Marcos spent years trying to lick
insurgency but failed, is averse to a call among military and police supporters
to fight insurgency by reviving the law that makes it a crime to be a
communist.
"The Anti-Subversion Act is a relic of the Cold War era," Sen. Imee R. Marcos said Tuesday. It is not ideology but criminal acts that should be punished," Marcos said.
"The Anti-Subversion Act is a relic of the Cold War era," Sen. Imee R. Marcos said Tuesday. It is not ideology but criminal acts that should be punished," Marcos said.
The senator
explained that "updating and upgrading the country's anti-terrorism
law" - the Human Security Act of 2007 - would provide a "stronger
legal instrument than the Anti-Subversion Act of 1957 to punish crimes
committed in the name of ideology, religion, politics, or economic gains."
Marcos
earlier filed Senate Bill 630, known as the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2019, to
increase the liability of crimes listed in the Human Security Act, providing
for a possible death penalty for rebellion, insurrection, coup d'etat, arson,
kidnapping, and hijacking, among others.
Other violent
or premeditated acts that intend to sow fear and panic among the public,
threaten the government, or disrupt public services are also considered forms
of terrorism in Marcos's bill, as are new modes of promoting and committing
violence using computer technology, educational institutions, and chemical,
biological, radiological, and nuclear material.
Sen. Marcos's stand against reviving the Anti-Subversion Act is not the first time she has gone against a position taken by her father President Marcos, who expanded the coverage of the said law during his term.
Sen. Marcos's stand against reviving the Anti-Subversion Act is not the first time she has gone against a position taken by her father President Marcos, who expanded the coverage of the said law during his term.
The creation
of the Youth Civic Action Program (YCAP) and Youth Development Training (YDT)
in the 70's was borne out of her opposition to the mandatory Reserve Officers'
Training Corps (ROTC) program first instituted by her father, Sen. Marcos
revealed in a press statement.
She has proposed to make ROTC an option rather than a requirement for college students in Senate Bill 413, which prescribes a Civil Service Program to instill patriotism among students in grade school to college.
She has proposed to make ROTC an option rather than a requirement for college students in Senate Bill 413, which prescribes a Civil Service Program to instill patriotism among students in grade school to college.
The country's
12-year-old anti-terrorism law must be updated soon to cope with the digital,
transnational, and evolving nature of terrorism, Marcos said.
New modes of
terrorism and what used to be mere predicate crimes are now main offenses
punishable with life imprisonment or a possible death penalty in Senate Bill
630, which Marcos filed to give more teeth to the Human Security Act of 2007.
"Terrorist
activity in Philippine territory has become frequent and commonplace,"
Marcos said, citing the first recorded case of a Filipino suicide bomber in
Sulu last July and the conviction of two terrorist suspects that included an
Indonesian earlier this year.
Not mentioned
in the present law, cyber attacks on computer systems are considered punishable
terrorist acts in the Marcos bill and would compel system providers to give
customer information to law enforcers.
Recruiting
terrorists and glorifying violent acts that sow fear and panic among the public
or threaten the government or public services, whether done personally or
through the media, are also in the bill’s roster of terrorist acts.
"Neither
religion, ideology, politics, nor economic goals can excuse acts of violent
extremism," Marcos said.
Naming the
violent use of chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear material as
terrorist acts will also harmonize national law with international agreements,
Marcos added.
Educational
institutions found involved in terrorist indoctrination will have its licenses
revoked, its officials made liable, and be immediately shut down.
Senate Bill
630 also provides for hold-departure orders on terrorist suspects and swifter
access to their bank accounts by giving the Anti-Terrorism Council the
authority to seek on its own a court order to open them.
Marcos also
proposed to delineate media coverage of hostage-taking incidents by
prioritizing concerns of national security and law enforcement efficiency,
recalling the international embarrassment caused by the Luneta hostage crisis
in 2010.
Violent acts
against Filipinos abroad are also punishable in Marcos's bill, nor will
planning terrorist acts outside the country or seeking shelter in embassies
within the country give legal refuge to foreign or Filipino terrorists for
attacks committed in Philippine territory.
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