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Activists slam arrest of NGO worker for rebellion

2022-11-14 Maria Salome Crisostomo Ujano

Maria Salome Crisostomo Ujano has never been in hiding, according to her daughter Karla Ujano. (Photo courtesy of KARLA UJANO)

The family and colleagues of a children鈥檚 rights defender, who had been coordinating with the government and even the police in her advocacy, expressed shock and indignation at her arrest on Sunday morning over a rebellion charge from more than a decade ago.

Activist Ma. Salome Crisostomo Ujano, 64, was arrested outside her home in the City of Malolos, Bulacan province, as she and her son had just arrived from an errand.

Ujano was still inside her car when the police told her that they were detaining her over a 2006 rebellion charge.

A warrant was issued on June 28 that year by then Lucena City Regional Trial Court Judge Virgilio Alfajora, after Ujano was charged for 鈥渃onspiring, confederating and cooperating鈥 to wage a rebellion in Quezon province.

Coordinating with police

According to a copy of the information against her, Ujano鈥檚 coaccused were Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) chair Jose Maria Sison, now-deceased New People鈥檚 Army (NPA) leader Gregorio 鈥淜a Roger鈥 Rosal, peace consultant Alan Jazmines, political prisoners Dionisio Almonte, Danilo Mendoza, Domingo Almosara and Armando Guevarra, and 100 others.

At that time, Ujano was executive director of the Women鈥檚 Crisis Center but was also becoming known as a children鈥檚 rights advocate.

She is currently the national coordinator of Philippines Against Child Trafficking (Pact).

It was in that capacity that Ujano, according to her fellow activists, had been coordinating with personnel of the Department of Justice and even the Philippine National Police in the pursuit of cases regarding violations of children鈥檚 rights.

Posting on social media, Child Rights Coalition Asia regional executive director Amihan Abueva said Ujano 鈥渉as been training police officers on how to handle cases of women and children who have been abused and exploited, working with prosecutors, social workers and NGO (nongovernmental organization) staff.鈥

But in a news conference on Monday, newly appointed PNP chief, Lt. Gen. Dionardo Carlos, claimed that Ujano had been in the government鈥檚 most wanted list, with a P5-million reward for her capture.

The rebellion case against Ujano 鈥渟temmed from [her] alleged involvement in a series of atrocities committed in Quezon 鈥 in 2005, particularly the ambush of Private First Class Michael Samsun and Corporal Edward Lumawig, in her capacity as a member of the Executive Committee Secretariat of the Southern Tagalog Regional Party Committee of the [CPP-NPA-National Democratic Front],鈥 Carlos said.

Pact, in a statement, denounced the 鈥渢rumped-up charges鈥 against Ujano.

鈥擱EPORTS FROM Krixia Subingsubing, Jeannette I. Andrade and Carmela Reyes-Estrope INQ
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