8 Shades of Truth

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  • 3/13/2015 Eight shades of truth | Inquirer Opinion

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    Eight shades of truth12:09 AM | Thursday, March 12th, 2015Randy David

    @inquirerdotnetPhilippine Daily Inquirer

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    Eight separate investigations have been launched to determine the truth behind the Mamasapano

    incident. They are likely to produce eight shades of truth, rather than one. This should not pose

    any problemexcept to those who think of the truth as if it were something out there, waiting to

    be ferreted out. As I said in a previous column, I favor the pragmatist concept of truth as

    something that is made or constructed for a specific purpose.

    There is only one Mamasapano incident, but many ways of looking at it. Some investigations, in

    their aspiration to produce the definitive account of what happened, may attempt to be as

    comprehensive as they can by focusing on a broad range of topics. But, rather than create a more

    complete picture, this attempt to aggregate different observational standpoints into a single vision

    may only bring out more blind spots.

    So much expectation, for instance, has attended the much-awaited report on Mamasapano by the

    Philippine National Polices board of inquiry (BOI). This heightens the temptation to cover all the

    questions that have been raised by various sectors of the public. The BOI would be well advised to

    avoid this pitfall by not thinking of itself as a truth commission. Its task, to my mind, is far

    narrower in scope: to review what happened from the perspective of the PNPs mandate, norms,

    procedures and tactical protocols. It may draw lessons and recommend sanctions specific to the

    work of the police as an organization. But it is not its business to pronounce itself on political,

    legal, or policy questions that are outside its area of competence.

    March 1

    Bail n

    Therepeace

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    Legal questions properly belong to the Department of Justice, which is conducting a separate

    investigation. It is the DOJs function to determine the facts from a legal perspective, to ask what

    laws have been violated and by whom, and to file the appropriate charges. On the other hand, the

    investigation by the Commission on Human Rights looks specifically at possible violations of

    human rights standards and protocols that may have been committed by both state and nonstate

    actors. Apart from recommending the filing of charges, its main interest would be to formulate

    measures aimed at preventing the future occurrence of such abuses.

    On top of these, the two chambers of Congress, as we know, initiated their own separate inquiries

    into this incident. The Senate completed its hearings, but the House, probably sensing its inability

    to rationalize its deliberations after one hearing, decided to suspend its investigation. These are

    supposed to be hearings in aid of legislationmeaning, their conduct is meant to guide the

    crafting or revision of laws and existing policies, not to determine guilt or assign culpability. But,

    given that the Senate and the House are autonomous political bodies, with a pronounced

    inclination to liberally interpret their oversight function, it is not easy in practice to delimit the

    scope of their inquiries. Not surprisingly, these sessions often take on the character of police

    investigations or of courtroom trials.

    Interestingly, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front launched its own investigation of the

    Mamasapano encounter in the light of the fact that a large number of its troops had participated

    in that firefight. The MILF is struggling to maintain its credibility as a partner in a protracted peace

    process that is about to bear fruit. Its main interest, I imagine, would be to determine how the

    misencounter happened, which of its local commands were drawn into it, why, and what

    violations, if any, were committed by the various combatants in that unfortunate encounter. The

    results of the investigation may lead the MILF to sanction some of its warriors if only to show that

    it is in control of its troops. But, I dont think it will agree to hand them over to the Philippine

    government for prosecution.

    Separate reports, we are told, are also being prepared by the Armed Forces of the Philippines and

    the International Monitoring Team (IMT) on the Peace Process. The AFP investigation will surely

    highlight the circumstances surrounding its inability to respond in a timely manner to the

    desperate pleas for reinforcement from the beleaguered Special Action Force troops. It will likely

    focus on the protocols governing the conduct of various types of military operations, as a way of

    showing the impossibility of acceding to the SAF request without the benefit of prior coordination.

    Finally, the IMT report will probably zero in on the existing ceasefire agreement, how it was

    broken, and why it took time to restore it once it was breached at Mamasapano. It may focus on

    the complexities of managing the fragile conditions of peace in conflict situations, and draw

    lessons on what it would take to prevent more bloodshed from endangering the ongoing peace

    process. This kind of truth is no less important, but it may not merit much attention from those

    who are far from the field of battle.

    To these eight shades of truth, one may now add President Aquinos ownstill a shade of gray to

    many, even after three speeches, because of its ambivalences and glosses. His third speech on

    the matter (which came as a lengthy reply to a question from the audience at a gathering of

    Christian evangelical church leaders in Malacaang), adds the least clarity to what has remained

    very much a clouded issue. The President seemed torn between taking ultimate responsibility for

    Pinoy Kasi

    March 12, 2015

    Role model

    Eight shades of truth

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    what government does or fails to do, and protecting himself from criminal liability. In any event, itwas awkward to hear the Commander in Chief heap all the blame on a single police officer forlapses committed in a mission that he, the President himself, had reviewed and authorized.

    * * *

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