PRIMER ON DESAPARECIDOS-PHILIPPINES · of Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU). From 1993 to 1999, there were...
Transcript of PRIMER ON DESAPARECIDOS-PHILIPPINES · of Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU). From 1993 to 1999, there were...
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PRIMER ON DESAPARECIDOS-PHILIPPINES
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Primer on Desaparecidos-PhilippinesPublished in the Philippines in 2012 by Desaparecidos-Philippines2/f Erythrina Bldg., 1 Maaralin St., Central District, DilimanQuezon City 1100, Philippines
Editor: Josephine DongailLayout and Cover Design: Jennifer Padilla
Photos: File photos from Desaparecidos-Philippines, Karapatan, Bulatlat, Arkibong Bayan and Pinoy Weekly
Printed and bound in the Philippines by IBON Press, 114 Timog Avenue, Quezon City 1103, Philippines
Published with the assistance of Stichting voor Ontwikkelingssamenwerking K.O.O.K.Our thanks go to ACY and AA.
The reproduction and distribution of information contained in this publication are allowed as long as the source is cited.
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Contents
5 Forewords
12 Introduction
18 Profile of Desaparecidos
22 Organizing for and with the families of the disappeared
24 Desaparecidos-Philippines, what it stands for
28 Documentation and thematic mass actions
29 References
33 Annex: List of the missing (1971-2011)
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Forewords
Message of Solidarity to Desaparecidos-Philippines1
Fidel V. Agcaoili
Desaparecidos-Philippines is dear to my heart. You have revived the true spirit and commitment of an organization fighting to secure justice for the victims of abductions and enforced disappearances, and have reached out to the victims’ families to help them find answers on the fate of their missing loved ones.
In November 1985, I helped form the organization FIND or Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearances – from the conceptualization of its name and objectives, developing the list of victims of enforced disappearances during the Marcos regime, contacting and meeting with their families, building their organization, and carrying out the work as its first appointed Executive Director. We gathered pictures of the victims as part of the documentation. We actively participated in the movement against the Marcos dictatorship towards obtaining justice for the victims. We filed complaints with the United Nations (UN) and other international organizations. We also solicited help and support for the families of the disappeared.
But in March 1987, I was elected Chairperson of Partido ng Bayan. I was obliged to pass on my tasks in Find to another, though I remained as its nominal Executive Director upon the request of the victims’ families. At that time, Find was already a functioning organization with its own office and more than fifty active family members, lobbying the new government of
1 Abbreviated version of his solidarity message to Desaparecidos-Philippines in its Third General Assembly on November 2, 2012.
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Mrs. Corazon Aquino for information from the military about their missing loved ones, seeking recognition for them as victims of human rights violations, and demanding the prosecution of the perpetrators of enforced disappearances.
But Find turned its back on its principles. To be able to receive funding from the Aquino government, Find agreed to relinquish the demand for justice in prosecuting the perpetrators of enforced disappearances so as not to upset the military and hold the reactionary state accountable for war crimes. It abandoned the task of organizing the victims’ families thereby rendering FIND an ineffective organization in fighting for justice. It was content to have a roster of victims that it peddled in international forums as its credentials. Find received regular funding from the yearly budget of the reactionary state that ensured the protection of military perpetrators from prosecution. Find was transformed into an ordinary NGO (non-governmental organization) serving the interests of its officers in terms of salaries and other perks.
I salute Desaparecidos-Philippines. Its formation provides the victims’ families once more with a venue to come together, organize and fight for justice for their missing loved ones. Desaparecidos-Philippines reaffirms the original mandate of Find and can claim itself as the latter’s continuity organization. It can even call itself Find-Justice to distinguish itself from the mercenary Find. Since its formation, Desaparecidos-Philippines has stood for justice for the victims of abductions and enforced disappearances. While organizing and caring for the families of the disappeared, Desaparecidos-Philippines demands and aims for the prosecution of military perpetrators and holds the reactionary state accountable for war crimes.
Along with progressive human rights organizations, Desaparecidos-Philippines has performed a crucial role in exposing and opposing state terrorism and the servility of Philippine regimes acting as accomplices of US imperialism in brutally suppressing the Filipino people’s just demand for national and social liberation. Desaparecidos-Philippines has sought to align itself with patriotic forces that seek to unite the Filipino people in building a free, independent,
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just and prosperous society. The enthusiasm of the members of Desaparecidos-Philippines in this regard is quite admirable perhaps as a consequence of the bitter fate their loved ones suffered at the hands of the reactionary state.
In just two years of President Noynoy Aquino’s term, hundreds of persons have been killed, abducted and disappeared, tortured, illegally arrested and imprisoned; and thousands more have experienced all forms of violence at the hands of the military, paramilitary and police in the communities from aerial and artillery bombardments, food blockade, hamletting and forced displacements. Yet, the US-backed Aquino regime denies its government’s bloody human rights record under Oplan Bayanihan, and has brashly lied to a foreign government that these grave human rights violations are only left-wing propaganda.
We must intensify the struggle against Oplan Bayanihan and the militarization of communities and systematic violations of human rights that are driven and supported by US imperialism. More than ever, we must intensify our solidarity to promote justice for all victims of human rights violations and fight for the rights of the oppressed and exploited masses for liberation.
Long live your fighting spirit and aspiration for the liberation of our people!
Long live Desaparecidos-Philippines!
Strengthen the unity of all the family members of Desaparecidos-Philippines!
Fight for justice!
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Persevere in the Struggle Against the Continuing Enforced Disappearances in the Philippines2
by Vicente P. Ladlad
I myself have come to know what enforced disappearance is all about. My first wife, Maria Leticia Pascual, was abducted by elements of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forced of the Philippines (ISAFP) in January 1976 in Paco, Manila. Since then, we have been in the dark on her whereabouts.
There should not be a let up in our fight against the state’s continuing policy of resorting to enforced disappearance, as well as other forms of human rights violations, in dealing with political activists and other political dissenters, be they members of the revolutionary movement or not.
We should not and cannot stop to fight against enforced disappearances because even after the end of Marcos’s martial rule, the succeeding regimes have not abandoned this policy. Many of us have lost a loved one during the fascist regime of Marcos. In that period, there were 254 desaparecidos. Among the known victims was Fr. Rudy Romano from Cebu. The figures do not even include the numerous unreported victims in the Moro areas during the height of the armed struggle for secession led by the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF).
2 This is a take-off from the keynote address delivered during the Third General Assembly of Desaparecidos-Philippines on November 2, 2012
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We must not forget that even after Marcos was deposed and Mrs. Corazon Aquino, the wife of a prominent martial law victim, took over the government, enforced disappearances continued. There were 65 desaparecidos in 1986 and 100 cases in 1987. In 1988, the number rose to 143. Along with enforced disappearances were brazen murders or extra-judicial killings which included those of lawyers, members of the clergy and well-known activists like Lean Alejandro of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN) and Rolando Olalia of Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU).
From 1993 to 1999, there were about 10 recorded disappearances every year. In that period, the Ramos government and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) were engaged in peace talks. Despite these apparently “low” figures, we should remember that Ramos was the chief of the AFP in the first years of the Aquino government and then Secretary of Defense. The plans and policies against the revolutionary movement which included acts of torture, extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances were under his direct responsibility.
Before he was ousted in 2001, Joseph Estrada adopted a new AFP military plan against the revolutionary movement containing an important section on the suppression of civilians suspected of supporting the armed struggle. Such an operation plan was tinkered with and readily approved by the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo government as Oplan Bantay Laya (OBL).
From eight desaparecidos in 2001, the number rose to 78 victims by 2006. Similarly, cases of extrajudicial killings or salvaging also rose in this period. Oplan Bantay Laya was designed to sow terror in people through killings, arbitrary arrests, torture, and enforced disappearances. The Arroyo government implemented OBL with such brazenness, that she even honored General Jovito Palparan in her 2004 state of the nation address.
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By 2008, the number of desaparecidos and victims of extra-judicial killings decreased. This can be attributed to the Filipino people’s condemnation of extrajudicial killings and other violations of human rights, with support from people in other countries.
With the government of President Noynoy Aquino harping on “daang matuwid” (righteous path), do we now stop fighting against enforced disappearances?
The problem with Aquino’s “daang matuwid” is that it is focused on the unauthorized use of “wangwang” (police car siren) and petty cases of corruption. When it comes to human rights violations, the Noynoy Aquino government traverses the “old path.” Oplan Bantay Laya has been rehashed and rebranded as Oplan Bayanihan. The military mindset – that the AFP and PNP may commit violations of human rights with impunity – is still deeply entrenched. Under the Oplan Bantay Laya and Oplan Bayanihan, the military and the police have treated political activists as combatants. It is no surprise then, that under the new Aquino government, the cases of extra-judicial killings and enforced disappearances are on the rise again.
Lastly, we cannot stop fighting against enforced disappearances because this is part of the tactics and techniques being used by US imperialism in combating revolutionary movements for national liberation and democracy. The AFP and PNP officers undergo trainings in US military schools.
It is no accident, that simultaneous with the increase of victims of enforced disappearances in the Philippines during the martial law regime, there was also such an increase in desaparecidos in Latin America. The US armed forces trained both the armed forces and police of Latin American countries and the Philippines in the strategy, tactics and techniques in suppressing the growing liberation movements. The brain and implementor of enforced disappearances as a policy is one and the same: US Imperialism.
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But repression also engendered resistance. The people of Latin America were not cowed by the scale of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances. The Las Madres de Plaza de Mayo of Argentina, with other people’s organizations, defied the fascist regime by converging at the Buenos Aires plaza every Thursday of each week.
Our Fight Continues
In the Philippines, save for the release of political prisoners after the ouster of Marcos, the succeeding governments have not done any substantial measure to address the human rights violations during martial law. Unlike in Latin America, there never was an official investigation of human rights violations in the Philippines, particularly of enforced disappearances.
We can learn lessons from the experience of people in Latin America, particularly Argentina, in our search for justice for the disappeared. We will resist human rights violations inflicted on the people, on us, and we will pursue justice till we achieve it.
I am glad the old and new members of Desparecidos-Philippines carry on the realization of the objectives which we set in the mid-1980s.
The gains from our protest actions seeking justice for the victims of enforced disappearances are few and far between, and certainly not enough yet to stop enforced disappearances. But we can build on those gains by firming up our resolve and doing the best we can.
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Introduction
What is a desaparecido
The phenomenon of abduction and enforced disappearance is an ancient barbaric practice to terrorize or to silence the opposition. During the Inquisitions of Europe’s medieval times, accused enemies of the Church were tortured as a matter of course, then were disappeared, never to be heard of from by their families. In the 1930s-1940s, the Nazis “institutionalized” abduction as an instrument of their fascist rule – millions of people disappeared in that holocaust of concentration camps and gas chambers. And, until today, many so-called modern democratic governments still use it as a covert tool of state
terrorism to silence their critics and political activists who do not agree with their policies and governance. There are tens of thousands of politically-motivated enforced disappearances that have terrorized peoples in the developing countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
During the Latin American military dictatorships of the 1960s-1980s, it was done extensively to silence activists and critics opposing their rule. All over the continent, hundreds of thousands of activists from all walks of life went missing, hence, the Spanish term “desaparecidos” –
According to the 2006 United Nations’ International Convention on enforced or involuntary disappearance, an “’enforced disappearance’ is considered to be the arrest, detention, abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty by agents of the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with the authorization, support or acquiescence of the State, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place such a person outside the protection of the law” (Part 1, Article 2, UN International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance).
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the disappeared. The Argentinians “politicized” the term when the mothers of the disappeared activists organized themselves to search for and publicly demanded justice for their missing kin.
Only in 2006 did the UN General Assembly formally adopt the international Convention which strengthens the 1992 UN Declaration on the Protection of all Persons from Enforced Disappearance, thus making governments liable for any violation of the right to life and freedom. The Convention also echoes the 1992 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court’s qualification that the widespread or systematic practice of enforced disappearance constitutes a crime against humanity (Part 1, Article 5).
In the Philippines, the first documented case of enforced disappearance was of 27-year-old Charlie del Rosario, a professor at the Philippine College of Commerce (now Polytechnic University of the Philippines) and one of the founding members of a national-democrat youth group Kabataang Makabayan (Patriotic Youth) in the 1960s. Charlie was last seen on the night of 19 March 1971 before the suspension
of the writ of habeas corpus that preceded the 1972 declaration of martial law by President Ferdinand E. Marcos. Charlie was mounting street posters against government repression when he was forcibly taken by suspected state military elements. He was never found.
The next year, when martial law was declared on the 21st of September, 38 cases of enforced disappearance were documented, 15 of whom involved Moros. The number of missing victims tripled in 1973, around 75% were Moros. The number would be more since many cases were undocumented and unreported.
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The Task Force Detainees of the Philippines (TFDP) started the documentation of human rights violations in 1974 which included the mounting enforced disappearances perpetrated by the Marcos military.
In 1975-77, the Marcos military committed the unprecedented crime of effecting multiple missing cases wherein at least 15 student-activists from Southern Tagalog were abducted and only one was surfaced. In 1975, Carlos San Jose and Bong Balatan were disappeared. In 1976, Adora Faye de Vera, Rolando Fedieris and Flora Coronacion were abducted and only Adora Faye was surfaced by her military captors. In 1977, Rizalina Ilagan, Gerry Faustino, Jessica Sales, Modesto Sison, Cristina Catalla, Ramon Jasul, Emmanuel Salvacruz, Salvador Panganiban, Virgilio Silva, and Erwin dela Torre went missing and became known as the ST 10. For the length of time that they have been missing, they are now presumed summarily executed by the Marcos military.
Other well-known youth activists who went missing were: in 1974, Francisco Portem in Bicol; in 1975, Nenita Luneta with her young child Ninia in Cabanatuan City; in 1976, were the first woman editor of the UP Los Banos official student paper Leticia Jimenez-Ladlad; Kabataang Makabayan national leader Emmanuel Alvarez; Atenean Emmanuel Yap; deacon and church organizer Carlos Tayag; and young newspaperman Henry Romero; and in 1977, Hermon Lagman, whose brother is Congressman Edcel Lagman.
Some of these activists came from influential families who had connections to people in power during that period. It was indicated by people in the know that confirmation of having anti-Marcos activists in the family would have been very damaging to some reputations in government. Hence, nothing was done to solve their enforced disappearances.
In spite of the presence of a witness who was willing to testify against the perpetrators whom she had definitely identified as members of the Philippine military, nothing came out of her case. This witness had survived her abduction, rape and torture – years later, she had to undergo reconstructive surgery after she was released from military custody due to the broken bones that were left untreated while she was incarcerated.
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After the Marcos martial rule, impunity continues
Eventually as the years went by after the end of Marcos’s martial rule and after different presidents took over the reins of government, the human rights situation did not actually change for the better, and had even worsened.
During the Corazon Aquino presidency (1986-1992), vigilante groups proliferated in several provinces, acting as military auxiliary groups composed of civilians under the command of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Their activities
were directed against activists and suspected rebels. There were 821 enforced disappearances during Mrs. Aquino’s six-year presidency.
Fidel V. Ramos (1992-1998) succeeded Corazon Aquino, and while he presided over a presidency that had the most signed peace negotiations documents with the underground National Democratic Front of the Philippines, his term ended with 39 enforced disappearances.
Peace talks in the Philippines
Since 1987 after the fall of the Marcos dictatorship, peace negotiations between the government of the Philippines (GRP/GPh) and the National Democratic Front (NDFP) had been going on intermittently. There are elements of the state who do not want the peace talks to get ahead, hence, many hindrances are implemented by government military forces, e.g., attempts at coups d’etat; extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances of activists, journalists, lawyers, et. al. During the Ramos presidency, the GRP panel kept official and so-called backdoor channels open so that the talks could continue.
In Mindanao, the southern part of the Philippines, is another war between the GPh and Filipino Islamists. Many were abducted and disappeared in the name of “protecting the Republic”.
Thousands of lives have also been lost to these civil wars that the GPh is waging against its own peoples. Peace talks with the Muslim front was started even during Marcos’s martial law, and it is still without any resolution.
(For more information on the peace negotiations in the Philippines, please go to www.opapp.gov.ph, www.ndfp.net and www.luwaran.com)’
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President Joseph Estrada’s administration (1998-2001), which ended prematurely due to his being deposed by a people’s uprising in 2001, had conducted an all-out-war policy in the Muslim areas of Mindanao. It was reported that the practice of enforced disappearance was used against civilians and Muslim rebels alike. Documentation of human rights organizations point to 26 disappearances during Estrada’s 2 ½ -year term, mostly from Mindanao.
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo became president (taking over Estrada’s remaining term from 2001 to 2004, and then was elected for 2004-2010). When
she proclaimed a State of Emergency in February 2006, human rights watchdog Karapatan documented an average of one disappearance per week during a four-year span of her nine-year presidency.
While the peace negotiations with the NDFP were suspended, the Arroyo government effected the arrest and disappearance of eleven (11) NDF peace consultants and staff who had surfaced from the underground for consultations on the peace process with their constituencies. It started with the disappearance of Philip Limjoco who was abducted on 19 May 2006, followed by the abduction of Rolando Porter in the same month. On 26 June of the same year, Leopoldo Ancheta was disappeared, followed two days later with the disappearance of Prudencio Calubid, his wife Celina Palma, his niece Gloria Soco, and a member of his staff, Ariel Beloy. Rogelio Calubad and his son Gabriel were disappeared on 16 July 2006. Federico Intise and his wife were disappeared on 26 October 2006.
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Cesar Batrallo was abducted on December 2006. Leo Velasco was disappeared on 19 February 2007. Some peace consultants who were secretly hustled into prison camps were monitored/accounted for by human rights organizations.
By the time her term ended in 2010, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s administration was criminally liable for the enforced disappearance of 206 documented individuals (see Karapatan’s 2010 year-end report).
The sitting president now is the son of democracy icons Corazon and Benigno Aquino Jr. As of end December 2012, there were nine documented cases of enforced disappearance.
And, these are the facts and figures of Philippine desaparecidos. Not included in these numbers are the other types of state-sanctioned human rights violations like harassment, forced evacuations due to military operations, imprisonment, torture, and extrajudicial killings.
The culture of impunity
The people in government, particularly the military, became emboldened in their impunity – for all the rhetoric of the celebrated 1986 EDSA revolution about justice, no one was ever charged or prosecuted for their human rights violations during martial law – in fact, these human rights violators were promoted in office, were appointed to high-level government positions, or they transformed themselves into politicians, senators, ambassadors, congressmen, governors, local government officials, etc. Meanwhile, national-democrat activists and other political dissenters – be they workers, farmers, women, students, NGO development workers, human rights advocates, environmentalists, government employees, indigenous peoples, religious leaders, urban poor, etc. – continued to be harassed, arrested, imprisoned, tortured, involuntarily disappeared, and killed (see documentation in www.karapatan.org)
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Profile of Desaparecidos
In looking at the documented profiles of Filipino desaparecidos, most of them are from the poorest sectors of Philippine society, particularly of the rural peasant poor, and they are targeted for abduction/liquidation because of their being suspected of sympathizing with or supporting the underground revolutionary movement that is based in the countryside. The desaparecidos from the urban areas are usually national-democrat activists and their supporters from all walks of life and who have been profiled as openly critical of state policies that are repressive and anti-poor.
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DOCumenteD DesapareCiDO inCiDents FrOm 1970-2011
President TermofOffice NoofEnforcedDisappearances
Ferdinand E. Marcos 1970-1986 759
Corazon C. Aquino 1986-1995 821
Fidel V. Ramos 1995-1998 39
Joseph E. Estrada 1998-2001 26
Gloria M. Arroyo 2001-2010 206
Benigno Aquino III 2010 to December 2012 9
Source: KARAPATAN files, www.karapatan.org
A most recent trend in the last decade are killing reprisals against human rights NGO workers, journalists/media people, environmentalists, and lawyers whose work takes them to writing and defending the human rights of their subjects, and of their clientele. The Philippines is rated by the New York-based independent, non-profit organization Committee to Protect Journalists as number 2 in its list of “20 deadliest countries” with 72 media people killed with impunity.
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Under the Marcos dictatorship, young military officers were widely known for their notorious involvement in the torture, involuntary disappearance, and extrajudicial killings of activists and other political dissenters. This legacy of terror has seemingly been accepted as the norm for military officers who came after martial law. Major General Jovito Palparan, Jr. is one of this legacy’s more infamous creatures, and he is not alone. It is said that there are many others like him, but unlike General Palparan, they keep themselves in their secret world of torture and murder.
General Palparan has been tagged as “The Butcher” by activist groups and human rights watchdogs for unsolved extra-judicial killings, enforced disappearances and torture perpetrated in his many areas of assignment from the late 1970s to 2010.
A close scrutiny of General Palparan’s record shows that many of the more prominent victims of human rights violations in the areas where he was assigned were aging men and women, children, and youths barely out of adolescence. He was quoted as saying that women and children become natural victims in armed conflicts “because they don’t know where to run, how to hide.”
His first assignment was as a second lieutenant with the 24th Infantry Battalion stationed in Indanan, Sulu, at the height of the revolutionary armed struggle waged by the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF). He admitted that children from the
Prof ile of a Human Rights Violator/State Terrorist
Wanted poster of General Palparan designed and distributed by KARAPATAN
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Tausug tribe – where most of the MNLF fighters belong – were among the victims of his men while he was stationed in Sulu. There, he said, soldiers saw Tausug children as “future enemies, so the thinking was to finish them off while they were still young” – a mode of thinking reminiscent of an American official, Gen. Jacob Smith, during the Philippine-American War who ordered the killing of everyone capable of bearing arms – including 10-year-old boys – in Samar.
His terrorism and the various atrocities he and his units commit are known by the Philippine government, but like all human rights violators before him, nothing has been done to bring him or any of them to justice.
However, in 2011, the criminal case filed by the families of University of the Philippines students, Karen Empeno and Sherlyn Cadapan, against Ret. Major General Jovito Palparan, Jr. for “arbitrary detention, serious physical injuries, maltreatment of prisoners, grave threats, grave coercion, rape and other human rights violations” had to be taken seriously by Philippine authorities. The case received a favorable judgment from the Department of Justice. Empeno, Cadapan and their farmer-guide Merino were abducted in 2006 – the two women are still missing and Merino was burned to death, according to a witness who is now under the protection of human rights groups due to threats against his life.
An arrest order was issued against General Palparan and his co-accused soldiers dated 20 December 2011, a day after he was off-loaded from an airplane to Singapore. He is still in hiding, and has not been arrested as of March 2013.
(See Bulatlat, the Philippines’s alternative weekly newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com). Vol. VI, No. 31, Sept. 10-16, 2006 for more details on General Palparan’s impunity career).
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The phenomenon of enforced disappearances in the Philippines has almost always been politically directed against the ranks of cause-oriented groups, particularly of the national-democrats. Since the time of the US-Marcos regime, national-democrat activists had been pointedly singled out for “neutralization.” But since Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s Oplan Bantay Laya being continued by Noynoy Aquino’s Oplan Bayanihan, even the open and above-ground activists are deliberately marked for ruination or liquidation. Thousands of dissenters associated with the national-democrats are summarily executed or involuntarily disappeared. Tens of thousands more are tortured, arrested, imprisoned and forced to leave their homes and cropland through forced evacuation.
During the waning years of the US-backed Marcos dictatorship in mid-1985, a group of national-democrat human rights advocates organized the families and friends of missing activists into FIND (Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearance). Aside from themselves and the relatives of disappeared activists, they invited prominent individuals of the anti-dictatorship movement to be part of FIND (see Ang Kanilang Kuwento, Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearance, Quezon City, 1998).
Organizing for and with the families of the disappeared
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Recollections on FIND during its beginnings (1985-1992)
1. Fidel Agcaoili remembering the establishment of FIND
“After my release from political detention in 1984, I worked as a volunteer at the Task Force Detainees (TFD), and it was from the TFD files that we were able to determine that more than 600 individuals were disappeared since TFD started their documentation in 1974, mostly from the ranks of national-democrat organizations and the others were Moros from Mindanao. The relatives of some of the disappeared and I met to discuss the formation of an organization that would concentrate on searching for their lost loved ones. The first organizing committee was made up of mothers, brothers and sisters of seven disappeared national-democrat activists.
Atty. Pedro Yap (the future Supreme Court Justice) was the first Chair of the Board (his younger brother is a desaparecido), with Mrs. Cecilia Lagman as the first President (one of her sons is a desaparecido). I was appointed as Executive Director to take care of day-to-day matters (this was how I, as the head of the secretariat was designated and not as Secretary-General, because I did not represent any disappeared relative, and FIND was a membership-based organization for the relatives of the disappeared. Human rights advocates and individual volunteers were, however, welcomed as associate members).
FIND’s first office was in one of the rooms in TFD where we completed the individual profiles/documentation of the desaparecidos of the Marcos Martial Law period. When I took on other tasks in the mass movement, the post of Executive Director was taken over by Manny Guzman who was a member of the core staff who transferred with me to FIND from the TFD. Up until I left the country in 1989, I would still be invited to attend its Board meetings by Mrs. Irinea Tayag, the second President after Mrs. Lagman.”
2. Manuel Guzman, Executive Director in mid-1986 and who stepped down from FIND the following year, mentioned that the post of Executive Director was dropped by the Board in 1987, and the new position of Coordinator was created to assist the working Chair. Linda Miranda was designated as FIND’s Coordinator until she resigned from FIND in 1992. The post of Secretary-General was created during the General Assembly of 1992, and given that FIND was now an organization exclusively for the relatives of the disappeared, only relatives were assigned posts in its secretariat. Unlike the preceding years, the Chair no longer carried out any executive functions.
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Desaparecidos-Philippines
In 1995, Desaparecidos-Philippines was convened to continue and reanimate the painstaking struggle to surface the victims, stop enforced disappearance and search for justice within the broader framework of the Filipino people’s struggle for justice, freedom and democracy; particularly, since FIND lost its national-democrat activist moorings, including its will to constantly contextualize its work in the over-all militant construct.
Today, Desaparecidos-Philippines is one of the most militant and active human rights organizations in the country dedicated to the search for justice for the disappeared. It organizes and orients the relatives and friends of the victims of enforced or involuntary disappearance.
Desaparecidos-Philippines helps families search for their missing kin, and campaigns for the surfacing of the desaparecidos. It continues to assist in documenting the unceasing human rights violations by the military and police. It extends various services to the families of the disappeared with resources provided by philanthropic donors. Networking with international institutions for moral, material and advocacy support helps Desaparecidos-Philippines continue in the work that it does with the families of the missing.
The organization also engages the judicial and legislative institutions of the Philippine government, and the United Nations, to address this abomination that has cruelly scarred families with never-ending uncertainty.
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Desaparecidos-Philippines under takes the following activities
solidarity among families, organizing and education
l reaches out to the families, relatives and friends of the disappeared to offer membership in the organization and thus be provided with a mutual support network of people who have similar experiences and are undergoing comparable difficulties;
l gathers together families of the disappeared in solidarity with other human rights victims by holding meetings, exchanges, and general assemblies;
l shares reading materials such as statements and other human rights materials like magazine articles, newspaper reports, book publications, lectures, etc. so that members are updated to understand their experiences in context, and are then able to act on what needs to be done regarding their situation;
l organizes or co-sponsors forums and issue discussions on the socio-political context of the phenomenon of enforced disappearances and the key importance of being immersed in the over-all struggle for people’s rights and human rights, in order to achieve justice.
l holds briefings on Republic Act No. 10353 (An Act Defining and Penalizing Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance) and other legislations that protect human rights;
l conducts education and training sessions on knowing one’s rights and paralegal skills
Campaigns and lobbying
l campaigns for the surfacing of those abducted who continue to be missing and for the prosecution of the perpetrators;
l demands a stop to the horrific practice of enforced or involuntary disappearance
l undertakes campaigns and other activities to inform everyone about cases of enforced/involuntary disappearances in the Philippines and the plight of the families of the disappeared;
l lobbies the following entities: Philippine legislature to enact and enforce laws that protect human rights;
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the judiciary for judicial reforms and for fair court proceedings; and government implementing agencies to obtain redress for the disappeared and their families;
l links up and works with human rights agencies of the United Nations, specifically with the UN Special Rapporteurs and Representatives; with international human rights organizations; and with faith-based institutions to inform them of the state of enforced disappearances and other human rights violations in the Philippines;
l submits monitoring reports and follow up cases filed with Philippine and international institutions in the search for justice and restitution for the disappeared.
services
l conducts fact-finding missions and searches in military camps and detachment, detention centers, prisons, burial sites, and other possible places where the missing persons may be found;
l helps in providing temporary sanctuary to families of the disappeared, including witnesses whose lives are currently at risk due to reported military harassment and reprisal;
l extends legal assistance, including support to families who seek legal remedies in court;
l facilitates the conduct of psycho-social therapy and counseling sessions in response to the needs of the families of the disappeared;
l generates financial and material resources from various donations and philanthropic resources to help meet some of the immediate needs of the indigent families of the disappeared, i.e., medical assistance, educational support for the orphaned children, minimal start-up contribution for the families to move on with some livelihood or employment opportunity, etc.
2726
And, while Desaparecidos-Philippines maintains this service-oriented routine for the families of the disappeared and its membership, it pursues a militant standpoint with regards its solidarity, information sharing, and advocacy with the various publics that it relates with.
This militant outlook is Desaparecidos-Philippines acting for genuine change – change that will bring about people collectively defining justice, human rights and peace, eschewing
the machinations of the elite to interpret the world with their greed and conceit. To Desaparecidos-Philippines, the key to achieving justice is not merely in striving for closure and restitution, but in transforming their grief and their loss to act and participate in changing and redefining the world – so that social injustice can be eradicated.
It means having the standpoint that families of the disappeared will not allow their activist-desaparecido’s commitment to be forgotten; they will continue what was left unfinished, working alongside members of the sectors and communities where they live in; it means that families of the disappeared will share and pass on this commitment through their work in solidarity-building, in information sharing, and in human rights advocacy; it means letting the unseen and unheard desaparecido speak to the living world through their parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren, wives, husbands, betrothed, cousins, and other relatives.
“Although I grieve, I am overwhelmed by joy that my daughter has made us understand her mission in life which we did not understand before...Who would continue their tasks? The dead could no longer speak. It is us, the ones they left behind, who must carry on what they had started…My only regret is that Beng had to die before I came to understand her work. Now, I know that she chose the right path.”
Evangeline Hernandez on her transformation as a human rights defender. Her daughter, Beng, was tortured and killed by the military while she was doing research on the peasant situation in North Cotabato, Mindanao in April 2002.
2928
Documentation and thematic mass actions
Meanwhile, the search for the missing continues. Desaparecidos-Philippines monitors involuntary disappearances, and accompanies the families of the disappeared to camps, detachments, detention centers, prisons, burial sites, and other possible places where the missing persons might be found.
To spotlight this specific situation of impunity, individual cases of recently disappeared activists are highlighted with mass actions and other forms of information dissemination.
“...after accepting that we would no longer see him, I vowed to continue the struggle of families like us, that
one day enforced disappearances would come to an end.”
- Shirley Pascual, wife of missing Roberto Pascual who was
abducted on 7 April 1988
2928
A number of these “surface our desaparecidos campaigns” are that of Jonas Burgos who in 28 April 2007, was forced into a waiting van while eating in a mall in the view of dumbfounded customers. Jonas, 36 at the time of his abduction, was an agriculture graduate who taught organic farming to farmers. His father Jose Burgos, a newspaper publisher, was an icon of press freedom who fought Marcos and martial law. His mother, Dr. Edita Burgos, is the former chairperson of Desaparecidos-Philippines.
Sherlyn Cadapan and Karen Empeño from the University of the Philippines were on field work when they were abducted in 2006 by suspected military men on suspicion that they were members of the New People’s Army (NPA), the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines – the two UP students are missing up to this day.
In the Visayas, Luisa Posa-Dominado and Nilo Arado were abducted on 12 April 2007. Luisa was the spokesperson of SELDA in Panay ((Society of Ex-Detainees Against Detention and Arrest). Nilo Arado was a national council member of Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (Peasant Movement of the Philippines). Their companion, Jose Ely “Leeboy” Garachico, Public Information Officer of KARAPATAN-Panay and the Coordinator of ILAC (Iloilo Legal Assistance Center), was shot and left to bleed. He has recovered since; Luisa and Nilo are still missing.
Some on-going campaigns in search of the missing
3130
In the Cordillera highlands, James Balao, one of the founders of the foremost indigenous peoples’ movement in the Philippines, disappeared during the early morning of 17 September 2008.
He had sent a text message to his family, who were 30 minutes away by car, that he was on his way home. He has not been heard of since.
In Mindanao, the couple Nelly and Federico Intise had been missing since 26 October 2006; she is an NGO worker and he is a farmer who, unbeknownst to his children, was a staff member of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines. Their children were taken care of by relatives when they disappeared, and the trauma of the disappearance has made them fearful for their own lives.
These cases highlight many other similar horrifying incidents and there are still thousands of unsolved cases of the missing in the Philippines. There is much to be done...
3130
How to Help
1. Join the call to stop the continuing human rights violations under the government’s counter insurgency policy specifically against enforced disappearances.
2. Join the call to surface all victims of enforced disappearance in the Philippines and in other oppressed countries.
3. Join human rights organizations such as KARAPATAN, Selda, Hustisya and Ecumenical Movement for Justice and Peace (EMJP) in their campaign to stop all forms of human rights violations.
4. Push for the strict implementation of RA 10353, An Act Defining and Penalizing Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance, and other legislations protecting human rights like the anti-torture law, etc..
5. Give material, financial and moral support to families of victims of enforced disappearances and other human rights violations.
6. Volunteer in activities of Desaparecidos-Philippines, join in their search for the missing, attend hearings of cases that victim’s families filed against military perpetrators and the struggle for justice for victims of enforced disappearances.
Desaparecidos-Philippines2/f Erythrina Bldg.1 Maaralin St., Central District, Diliman, Quezon City 1100PhilippinesTelefax: (63 2) 434 2837 or (63 2) 435 4146Email: [email protected] or [email protected] other inquiries and information, please contact:
3332
Websiteswww.karapatan.org
http://desaparesidos.wordpress.com/http://hrdefenders.wordpress.com/
http://chra8.mutiply.com/http://freejonasburgosmovement.blogspot.com/
http://sites.google.com/site/surfacejamesbalao/www.saveluisaandnilo.com/
http://stopthekillings.org/stknpv2/
References FIND (Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearance) documents:Ang Kanilang Kuwento. FIND (ISBN: 971-92011-1-8); Printworld, Cainta-Rizal, Philippines, 1998. Sevilla, Jr., Silverio G. (editor). Beyond Disappearance: Chronicles of Courage. FIND (ISBN 971-920-11-2-6), Philippines, 2006.“Enforced Disappearance: Questions and Answers”. FIND, Philippines, 2010.Glossary of Human Rights Violations, KARAPATAN, 2011.Startup, Patricia and Laird, Eileen. “Fact-Finding Mission Report: Cotabato, Zamboanga del Sur, May 1985”; Claretian Publications, Quezon City, Philippines, 1985.Carranza, Ruben. “From Marcos to Another Aquino: Impunity, Accountability and Transitional Justice in the Philippines”, paper developed for EP JUST National Monitoring Mechanism-Regional Forum Series; European Union-Philippines Justice Support Programme (EP JUST), Manila, Philippines, 2011.Evans, Jessica. “No Justice Just Adds to the Pain”, Report on the killings, disappearances, and impunity in the Philippines; Human Rights Watch (www.hrw.org), New York, USA, 2011.Pacifico A. Agabin, Sedfrey M. Candelaria, Carlos P. Medina, Jr., Herminio Harry L. Roque, Jr., and Cecilia Rachel V. Quisumbing. Helpbook on Human Rights Issues: Extralegal Killings and Enforced Disappearances; Supreme Court of the Philippines, 2011.Mc Coy, Alfred, Closer Than Brothers; Yale University Press, USA, 1999.Bulatlat, (www.bulatlat.com), Vol. VI, No. 31, Sept. 10-16, 20061998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal CourtUnited Nations Documents:
Universal Declaration of Human RightsInternational Covenant on Civil and Political RightsInternational Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural RightsInternational Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance
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Annex 1:
Working List of the Names of the Missing from 1971 to the Present
DESAPARECIDOS-PHILIPPINES
The names that are listed here from 1971-1994 are from old files of theTFDP (Task force Detainees of the Philippines), FIND (Families of the Involuntary Disappeared), and SELDA (Association of Ex-Political Detainees Against Detention and Arrest). The list of names from 1995 to the present have been gathered from the files of DESAPARECIDOS, KARAPATAN, and SELDA.
There is need to do some review and validation of the names and other details that are in these lists because some have been found or surfaced, or names might have been inadvertently or wrongly submitted during those fearful time of martial law and its after-years.
The editors of this publication have decided to keep the names as they were found in the various lists that were unearthed from old files, so that corrections can be done through the relatives and friends who may come across this documentation of the names that are here. Furthermore, many survivors of martial law spoke of disappearances and killings that happened in the countryside which remained unreported due to the backwardness and inaccessibilty of communications technology during that period.
It is hoped that the presence of this “raw” list will encourage people to come out if they have any infor-mation about any of the names in this list, or unnamed victims that need to be included in this list.
Like the unfinished resolution of human rights violations since the US-Marcos dictatorship to the present, this list will have to remain as an unfinished documentation because of its missing details. It will also be a work-in-progress that Filipino human rights defenders and advocates will have to continue remembering because justice will have to be rendered to the missing and other victims of human rights violations in the Philippines.
353434
1971-1973
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Romeo Magbanua Jan 1
Abel Makauyag Jan 7
Doma Salik Jan 15
Babad Edzrael Jan 17
Manombok Payot Jan 31
Kamad Salilagurao Feb 3
Datu Kalag Feb 10
Manongkas Pasagi Feb 10
Omal Sapalon Feb 16
Pandita Santos Feb 25
Tingao Salilagurao
Hermegildo Garcia III Mar
Kanapia Salim Mar 2
Guiamaluclen Mantawil Mar 2
Amilil Palakad Mar 8
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Carlos del Rosario March 19
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Mauricio Marimla Feb 20
Francisco Tolentino Apr 10
Mugawan Baiabagan Apr 15
Tato Balabagan Apr 15
Lumidta Balabagan Apr 15
Jaime Quimbao May 1
Alfredo Julian June 5
Abmas Dalonan Aug 18
Palermo Lombres Sr. Aug 24
Reynaldo Timbol Sept 10
Abdul Saban Sept 10
Carlito Dila Cruz Sept 24
Genardo Canedo Sept 24
Nestor Canedo Sept 24
Anacito Canedo
Datu Abubakar Sept 20
Ibrahim Lumansag Sept 21
Liga Lumansag Sept 21
Edwin Nar tates Sept 23
Abduipatah Abdullah Oct 1
Sinapal Agao Oct 2
Sailona kadil Oct 2
Dandia Bayaw Oct 9
Alonto Pianga Oct 9
Mariano Bondoc Oct 10
Juan Evan Oct 12
Raul Angeles Oct 14
Mangigen Kawil Oct 19
Isabelo A. Bonus Jr. Nov 13
Bayani Lontok Nov
Datu Malang Oct 2
Saidali Caluden Dec 14
Hadji Raup Bulilo Dec 16
Pendaylan Dumayao Dec 16
Kutid Unak Dec 20
Salvador Santos Dec 23
Ben- Hur D. Hilotin Dec 28
Roy Lorenzo Acebedo Dec
1972
1971
1973
3534 35
1973
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Romeo Magbanua Jan 1
Abel Makauyag Jan 7
Doma Salik Jan 15
Babad Edzrael Jan 17
Manombok Payot Jan 31
Kamad Salilagurao Feb 3
Datu Kalag Feb 10
Manongkas Pasagi Feb 10
Omal Sapalon Feb 16
Pandita Santos Feb 25
Tingao Salilagurao
Hermegildo Garcia III Mar
Kanapia Salim Mar 2
Guiamaluclen Mantawil Mar 2
Amilil Palakad Mar 8
Casim Mustapha Mar 10
Katuya kabigat Mar 11
Midpantao Noh Mar 12
Adtig Mucalam Mar 12
Ayunan Sailila Mar 13
Abduladzis Adas Mar 15
Hadji Ibrahim Mar 16
Kadiguia Osi Mar 16
Pangandigan Adil Mar 10
Teng Susaiman Mar 20
Tasie Masukat Mar 20
Edsa Kasim Mar 20
Odin Ibrahim Mar 20
Sandatu Abas Mar 20
Monesa Lubpangan Mar 26
Romeo Mape Mar 29
Gaudencio Indino III Mar 30
Esmail Madsig Apr 2
Malugayak Malantawan Apr 2
Saddira Sarail Apr 3
Hadji Pendao Apr 3
Abdulradzak Ampatuan Apr 14
Esmael Mataly Apr 14
Zainal Deudo Apr 14
Kubong Kadidisan Apr 10
Kadtangan Guiamokan Apr 12
Hadji Utap Apr 12
Yusop Budil Apr 27
Bitol Manguilaas Apr 27
Dagedeban Mamaluba May 5
Guiamal Lumedig May 5
Guiamal Lumedez May 5
Samama Mutim May 7
Manuel Amor May 11
Salvador Cabayao May 15
Aliman Gudama May 21
Puked Iskak May 22
Ali Omar June 2
Alber to Espeno June 3
Mano Musa June 6
Kadir Musa June 6
Meto Taruyan June 13
Dekay Uga June 15
Buka Kimay June 15
Abas Usman June 15
Mama Usman June 15
Malik Usman June 15
Makalusay Musa June 23
Arcadio Tumulak June 24
Antonio Ariado July 1
Radsah Sindatok July 6
Larry Ugalingan July 8
Badal Mabandtog July 10
Usop Nabadtog July 10
Sumagutin Kamad July 10
Sinenggayan Pinagayab July 12
Baibangan Lumenda July 13
Tomas Arnoco July 15
Abdul Guiapar July 15
Samama Matag July 18
Geronimo Gutay July 24
Domingo Gutay July 24
Alfredo Grayda July 24
373636
1973-1974
Usop kamid Aug 3
Kamaruden Patak Aug 10
Saikuden Patak Aug 10
Salih Andig Aug 12
Menok Mustapha Aug 17
Lumadsik Mustapha Aug 17
Kamanso Pangadigan Aug 20
Datu Tungao Sept 3
Bombolin Alilaya Sept 4
Liposen Panambay Sept 6
Kato Esrael Sept 7
Gumama Pendaliday Sept 13
Dagundag Alipollo Sept 14
Miliyan Dagenday Sept 14
Mohamad Saguia Sept 11
Yusop Malibo Sept 20
Usop Samad Sept 20
Taks Samad
Sailila Maguid Sept 21
Sammuel Carin Sept 17
Kasan Makadatu Oct 3
Hansa Blah Oct 5
Tugal Odin Oct 10
Abusama Adal Oct 10
Guinaid Adal Oct 10
Salem Nonongan Oct 10
Salimenang Mangansakan Oct 11
Maungan Salimula Oct 19
Ayob Guiadel Oct 23
Okangki Kaliyagan Nov 12
Kamidon Aba Nov 12
Ayob Aba Nov 12
Hasim Alou Dec 2
Abe Adal Dec10
Ben Silongan Dec 12
Alfredo Mendoza Dec 25
Sinalimbo Alim Dec 26
Ludovico Elma
Lorenzo Haveria
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Rober to Santos Jan 1
Leopaldo Gaton Jan 1
Rodolfo Puro Jan 1
Crispulo Gutlay Jr. Jan 1
Sinalog Pilas Jan 8
Samuel Pelas Jan 8
Blah Kubong Jan 15
Tua Mangelen Jan 15
Konowa Omar Jan 15
Rudy Floresca Magpayo Jan 16
Managada Dimasakay Jan 23
Tarzan Dimasakay Jan 23
Magsaysay Dimasakay Jan 23
Usop Bualan Feb 2
Katungao Egkiang Feb 4
Dumpao Usman Feb 8
Kumagal Kusain Feb 9
Pedro Villarubia Mar 4
Abdulkasam Mamadla Mar 10
1974
3736 37
1974
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Rober to Santos Jan 1
Leopaldo Gaton Jan 1
Rodolfo Puro Jan 1
Crispulo Gutlay Jr. Jan 1
Sinalog Pilas Jan 8
Samuel Pelas Jan 8
Blah Kubong Jan 15
Tua Mangelen Jan 15
Konowa Omar Jan 15
Rudy Floresca Magpayo Jan 16
Managada Dimasakay Jan 23
Tarzan Dimasakay Jan 23
Magsaysay Dimasakay Jan 23
Usop Bualan Feb 2
Katungao Egkiang Feb 4
Dumpao Usman Feb 8
Kumagal Kusain Feb 9
Pedro Villarubia Mar 4
Abdulkasam Mamadla Mar 10
Makenong Ugalingan Mar 10
Sulaiman Mamadla Mar 10
Datu Umbra Rajamuda Mar 15
Guiamla Maliga Mar 25
Edon Maliga Mar 25
Mukalam Balabaran Mar 30
Rolando Villarin Mar 20
Ibad Kasilang Mar 25
Batokan Pena Apr 5
Leopoldo Nabual Apr 15
Klang Mandalait Apr 15
Guiamdel Sulaiman Apr 15
Abdullah Tulusan Apr 20
Omar Ababalar May 5
Tot Omar May 5
Karantuan Dusdan may
Abadillah Singon May 10
Omar Mangolay May 10
Luminog Ayonan May 14
Guianon Ali May 15
Mohamad Gambal May 16
Metug Ali May 19
Kamad Asao May 20
Tong Alamoda May 20
Kaligatong Dagadas June 3
Tamondo Bagueled June 10
Makurod Bantulinay June 15
Incion Balina July 5
Blut Sakal July 5
Anday Budi July 10
Kahal Sansaluma July 12
Hasan Kabel July 13
Usop Pugayao July 13
Sumagayan Asao July 20
Pangol Edsa July 20
Dandar Usaman July 29
Abdillah Usaman July 29
Abdul Usaman July 29
Isaac De Guzman Aug 2
Mariano Laxa Aug 4
Ana Angkanan Aug 13
Usop Ankanan Aug 13
Guimalon Bantulinay Aug 13
Mapandi Saligidan Aug 13
Amin Nanding Aug 15
Mantel Abdulrahim Aug 15
Sangs Abo Aug 18
Ubi Salilama Aug 21
Eddie Salilama Aug 21
Mike Ayunan Aug 24
Mustapha Aloy Aug 30
Kamal Pendatum Aug 30
Mamat Mamot Guiampaca Sept 5
Juanito Solayao Sept 5
Maitum Guimpaca Sept 6
Sally Guimpaca Sept 6
Bai Puti Guiampaca Sept 6
Virgilio del Monte Sept 11
Mangompas Panansaran Sept 12
Buagas Panansaran
Samad Lunda Sept 13
Simeon Salayao Sept 15
Mustapa Mucalam Sept 17
Mastuna Yusop Sept 18
Mutin Wahak Sept 18
Kambong Dimarob Sept 18
393838
1974-1975
Sailila Dimarob Sept 18
Ulok Dimarob Sept 18
Mac Sanday Sept 20
Datumana Kasim Sept 20
Datuil Kasim Sept 20
Kutin Maranao Sept 20
Datukon Kasim Sept 20
Datu Norudin Mastura Sept 23
Tahir Magulamas Sept 26
Datu Nanding Mastura Sept 28
Kilam Ugalingan Oct 9
Reynaldo Cabigayan Oct 10
Norber to Rafales Oct 10
Mioses Rosanes Oct 15
Samaon Kalim Nov 13
Abdulkaham Ali Nov 19
Fukan Samama Nov 21
Unotan Bondao Nov 21
Ruben Pomarijos Nov 26
Kadalem Bangkailan Dec 7
Musa Sangkupan Dec 7
Arnulfo Altamirano Resus Dec 12
Filipa Areston
Abusara Antao Dec 20
Kamlon Magendla Dec 28
Pangandaman Pumanggar Dec 28
Francisco Por tem Dec 30
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Armando Mendoza Jan 1
Esmil Kamad Jan 15
Abdulkader Kamad Jan 15
Kulat Bombolan Jan 18
Ela Bombolan Jan 18
Salama Bombolan Jan 18
Mantil Bombolan Jan 18
Maisola Bombolan Jan 18
Demaudtong Gisrali Jan 20
Roy Lorenzo Acebado Feb 1
Guima Ali Feb 5
Abu Talusan Feb 10
Lamber to Guinto Feb 22
Nolito Acebedo Mar 1
Kanid Guiber Mar 4
Gualel Pulad Mar 6
Omar Pancho Mar 6
Kapusan Pakang Mar 10
Magcab Dalgan Mar 10
Undag Untong Mar 20
Muslimin Beneto Mar 23
Amil Edsra Mar 25
Tautin Nawal Mar 25
Usop Sangehan Mar 28
Atty. Angel Malondo Mar
Exequel Ocampo Apr 14
Makasulay Abdullah May 15
Margarita nenita Luneta June 1
Ninia Luneta June 1
Necamedes Refoncian June 15
Saidal Talusod June 15
Dilf in Demadante June 21
Bernardino Imprero July 23
Mamadla Ali June 25
Johannes Bautista Barrozo June
1975
3938 39
1975-1976
Johannes Barrozo July 1
Eugenio Flores July 1
Ning-ning Flores July 1
Eutiquio Cabrera Aug 1
Marcelino Cabrera Aug 1
Vicente Cabrera Aug 1
Primitive Herbolingo Aug 1
Bienvenido Bodiongan Aug 5
Ulama Edsla Aug 5
Ustadz Kamag Aug 5
Herber t Cayunda Aug 7
Bualan Maleges Sept 3
Blah Asim Sept 5
Ali Senda Sept 10
Sambutuan Kasan Sept 21
Bakar Ayunan Oct 2
Samad Usman Oct 15
Abdulkalid Usman Oct 15
Mohamad Usman Oct 15
Armando mendoza Oct 17
Rogelio Pangan Oct 18
Manap Blah Oct 18
Isting Esmael Oct 18
Magrib Bayataw Nov 1
Danny Ramat Nov 17
Manuel Ontong Nov 22
Kabad Bayaw Nov 22
Aniceton Tibayan
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Leticia Ladlad Jan 1
Sansaluna Baguilan Jan 1
Salipada Parasan Jan 4
Emmanuel Alvarez Jan 6
Tibak Omar Jan 11
Mentang Ulama Jan 23
Salipudin Mamendilala Jan 26
Kabeb Unob Feb 3
Kadigula Mohamad Feb 10
Emmanual Yap Feb 14
Duki Laguiali Mar 4
Naserun Uday Mar 10
Guiamarodin Ebrahim Mar 10
Tahir Ampatuan Mar 10
Kambar Nanding Mar 17
Bidangan Munting Mar 30
Alday Amilusin Mar 6
Kadtungan Alon Apr 6
Mentato Bakmal Apr 25
Soliaman Aron Apr
Ludovico Elma Jr. May 1
Duton Sangkupan May 8
Pattah Makalimpas May 13
Malaydan Maguilaba May 15
Samod Sapular May 15
Salipada Midtimbang June 10
Pasandalan Bagua June 7
Mengki Dagadas June 11
Mariano Lopez June 12
Elino Legbas June 15
Alonto Lidasan June 17
Untong Maulana July 3
Palim Abu july 7
Palaguyan Kudalat July 10
1976
414040
1976-1977
Kuna Kamad July 10
Sahamy Tuan July 21
Sampulna Akil July 24
Haron Samat July 24
Nala kamaguia Aug 6
Manampin Aug 7
Datuan Ambag Aug 8
Panso Ambag Aug 8
Bagonto Baliwan Aug 9
Taluban Manalangkay Aug 10
Zacaria Hasim Aug 12
Carlos Tayag Aug 17
Adbulsulam Abubakar Aug 26
Roman Maquimana Aug 27
Unlisen Mohamad Sept 3
Intie Kambel Sept 6
Mar tin Kasan Sept 6
Akob Kangka Sept 6
Mar ten kasan Sept 6
Buto Kambal Sept 6
Ulama Guimat Sept 6
Lingguauna Padian Sept 6
Baluno Urag Sept 6
Sulaimante Abdul Sept 6
Abu Lakim Sept 10
Abu Lakim Sept 10
Dalunan Saligandang Sept 14
Fausto Carbonell Sept 15
Akmad Kansa Sept 15
Zahira Masukat Sept 20
Tuda Mabandis Sept 27
Minundas Keto Sept 26
Henry Romero Oct 1
Sulik Sulaiman Oct 6
Abdullah Ngamas Oct 10
Hersimo Bermas Oct 11
Felix Alcomendras Oct 13
Louie Demontano Oct 14
Mohamad Orasun Oct 25
Norodin Abdul Oct 25
Buslan Abdul Oct 25
Kusain Abdul Oct 25
Rodrigo Peregrino Nov 1
Winnie Peregrino Nov 1
Anok Boto Nov 6
Embrahim Kalim Nov 15
Tunggal Balambad Nov 15
Anok Alimao Nov 15
Bano Ebrahim Nov 18
Gampong Abdulrahan Nov 20
Isidro Manalo Nov 23
Senda Talib Nov 25
Benvenido Flores Nov 30
Kakao Zailon Dec 1
Bunguan Zailon Dec 1
Digandang Acbar Dec 8
Gualber to Personila Dec 27
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Yamano Hasim Jan 3
Jose Datu Jan 4
Usop Languyoan Jan 5
Primitivo Mejares Jan
Jaime Rebato Jan 8
1977
4140 41
1977-1978
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Yamano Hasim Jan 3
Jose Datu Jan 4
Usop Languyoan Jan 5
Primitivo Mejares Jan
Jaime Rebato Jan 8
Antalin Enriquez Jan 13
Victor Fruto Jan 13
Arnulfo Resus Feb 1
Rogelio Acosta Feb 12
Benjamin Bahiyo Feb 28
Joselito Barrientos Mar 5
Tulay Asim Mar 17
Brahim Lakiman Mar 17
Exequil Glaes Mar 20
Omar Tato Mar 28
Lolita Bello
Monib Samilon Apr 7
Bakar Salilama Apr 19
Gannie Arra Apr 23
Wahid Diamla Apr 23
Basir Kabib May 7
Victor Dandan Reyes May 11
Hermon Lagman May 11
Alexander Castro May 23
Herminio Mallari June 2
Bonifacio Soriano June 8
Cristina Catalla July 31
Erwin De La Torre July 31
Gerardo Faustino July 31
Rizalina Ilagan July 31
Ramon Jasul July 31
Jessica Sales July 31
Modesto Sison July 31
Ardiana Villaver July 31
Bienvenido Perez Aug 4
Jonathan Giganto Aug 7
Kamdatu Ali Sept 3
Manuel Ontong Sept 9
Latip Mamodsod Sept 19
Julito Katipunan Sept 16
Guiamad Kadtusan Nov 17
Romeo delo Llagas Cabrera Dec 11
Mereno Ansar Dec 11
Salvador Ansar Dec 11
Abdulgani kabagani Dec 24
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Benedicto Come Jan 1
Rafael Edpis Jan
Ruben Maningas Jan
Abdulmutalib Kalipapa Feb 16
Wabar Dalumag Mar 3
Catherine Atumia Mar 1
Elena Edpis Mar 1
Ebulang Yag-ao
Rosauro Baldejueza Mar 6
Jenalyn Giganto Mar 10
Pulok Mayasal Mar 12
Magsaysay Pusawilan Mar 25
Patak Kusain Apr 13
Datu Mluk Apr 28
Isabelo Naves May 17
Agustin Gelilang May 27
Alber to Katipunan May 27
Emelinda Aycochu May 29
Edison Coronado June 1
1978
434242
1978-1979
Senda Salik June 5
Macmod Guialid June 5
Ayab Sinon June 5
Abilosa Kaido June 10
Ernesto Nasareno June 14
Edsrael Buta Aug 12
Mama Anok Aug 15
Akmad Matabalao Aug 17
Saot Samad Aug 21
Esmael Macapantal Aug 24
Otoman Edsaman Aug 24
Apolonio Tion Aug 25
Felino Malinao Aug 25
Raid kasan Aug 27
Abedar Talib Sept 11
Wahab Talib Sept 11
Prodencio Hallegado Sept 15
Japenes Uyag Sept 21
Saiduli Uyag Sept 21
Michael Sinsuat Sept 21
Leonides Marajas Sept
Elpidio Flores Oct 10
Rober to Luzon Oct 10
Mensual Buisan Oct 16
Harana Abubakar Oct 23
Ading Agil Oct 23
Muktadir Sari Ahmad Oct 23
Maran Aidani Oct 23
Pindan Aidani Oct 23
Harana Julkarnain Oct 23
Kahiyulan Julkarnain Oct 23
Ruhana Jumdail Oct 23
Sahila Manadali Oct 23
Lilloh Manaji Oct 23
Sakkam Saddang Oct 23
Asamuddin Sadjarani Oct 23
Mahmod Sadjarani Oct 23
Rakid Sadjarani Oct 23
Hudayya Sahi Oct 23
It ti Sahiron Oct 23
Albani Sappari Oct 23
Akmad kamsa Nov 11
Francisco Jocosal Dec 12
Dalansian Aba Dec 15
Antonio Baquing Dec 17
Reynaldo Bula Dec 28
Karim Dumama Dec 28
Pilot Guiamalon
Zarnudin Bantas
Ratu Bantas
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Douglas Oledo Jan 1
Florencio Pesquesa Jan 3
Mustapha Ali Jan 9
Rodolfo Ramos Jan 11
Alimar Abedin Jan 11
Abdulawi Imbang Feb 8
Zainudin Ebus Feb 10
Mohammad Abdillah Feb 15
Pak Kanuan Feb 17
Sukon Aguio Feb 27
Alamaddin Kussain Feb 27
Amanodin Salik Feb 27
1979
4342 43
1979-1980
Sabayan Salik Feb 27
Abusama Zacaria Mar 21
Abdul Zacaria Mar 21
Sagulongan Malaguia Apr 3
Julito Calido Apr 12
Tatik Kaumi Apr 27
Takol Bangkulat May 5
Pablito Lentija May 12
Unos Baguilan May 17
Udtog Odasan May 17
Clement Listana
Datu Ali Aduk June 27
Motem Kilam June 27
Martin Sabang June 27
Makalabay Kayangsang June 28
Ignacio Buenafe July 11
Regino Espenesin Sr. July 11
Pablo Pajaroja July 11
Quirino Pajaroja July 11
Oliver Roncales July 11
Ar temio Simbahan July 13
Racman Sultan July 18
Kandayog Pendaton July 19
Rolando Mercador July 22
Zoilo Francisco Aug 7
Undo Kamensa Aug 20
Rodolfo Carvajal Aug 25
Saidali Tubac Aug 11
Arumpac Moda Aug 31
Mamasa Moda Aug 31
Pesina Sate Sept 3
Alejandro Endos Sept 8
Juanito Endos Sept 8
Pablo Castro Sept 15
Juan Napoles Sept 19
Dominador Nogoy Sept 29
Mohamad Abiden Oct 9
Anting Polao Oct 20
Kamid Abiden Nov 9
Guialoson Sapal Nov 9
Antonio Rivera Nov 10
Omar Guarander Nov 15
Jovito Dimaiilig Nov 16
Alexander Dimaiilig Nov 16
Quinten Medcadal Nov 19
Datu Ulaya Nov 27
Mario Dayondon Dec 6
Arnulfo Mondejar Dec 6
Oscar Mondejar Dec 6
Antonio Villanueva Dec 6
Kennedy Joaquin Dec 10
Maximo Gabiana Dec 15
Kasan Kadil Dec 26
Botin Samama Dec 26
Gulamad Samama Dec 26
Jovincia Tuba 1979
Alfredo Buhol 1979
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Teodoro Tuballas Jan 5
Adriano Pronebo Jan 21
Kamal Ducan Fen 14
Samsodin Lumambas Feb 17
Julio Jaralbio Feb 17
1980
454444
1980
Abdula Korekan Feb 18
Bagunto korekan Feb 18
Gagbo Feb 20
Renato Nogoy Mar 9
Bonifacio Dinglasan Mar 12
Petronilo Turno Mar 13
Felizardo Reyes Mar 14
Romeo Sarintas Mar 20
Mamerto Granados Mar 27
Paquito Rebangcos Apr 1
Amina Gawin Apr 5
Modesto Alim Apr 7
Wenny Dacles Apr 13
Omar Markaban Apr 19
Victorino Leguin Apr 23
Decoroso Guardo May 1
Jesus Labong May 16
Antonio Bantot May 16
Matias Lopez May 16
Oscar Maningo May 16
Carlos Alonaid May 26
Orlando Reyes May 26
Ernesto Jocosol May 29
Alber to Lumanlan June 1
Moreto Mamon June 20
Salvador Villa June 20
Benito Madija June 27
Edgardo Estojero June 30
Ricardo Alconga June 30
Catalino Bajado July 13
Federico Quitorio July 21
Maximino Reyes Aug 2
Fred Miyos Aug 7
Romeo Crismo Aug 12
Tito Mauricio Aug 17
Bienvenido Catubig Sept 22
Gumiling Abedin Sept 29
Pangandaman Abidin Sept 29
Felipe Mosca Oct
Celso Pecinio Oct 11
Isidro Rerbato Oct 11
Domingo Rebato Oct 11
Lunding Rebato Oct 11
Recto Rebato Oct 11
Rodolfo Rebato Oct 11
Antonio Sanchez Oct 11
Immanuel Obispo Oct 17
Gualber to Dalayan Oct 18
Miguel Albiso Oct 27
Domino Candido Nov 2
Ernesto Cayupasan Nov 2
Alfredo Surio Nov 2
Rafael Surio Nov 2
Vicente Morales Nov 2
Cleto Bar tolo Nov 3
Maguid Madi
Monera Abidin Nov 4
Zalika Bakas Nov 4
Ricky Quinico Nov 4
Bernardino Fuentes Nov 11
Jose Alto Nov 27
Lober to Capoquian Nov 29
Valeriano Llenado Nov 30
4544 45
1981
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Melanio Bajado Jan 2
Vivencio Santos Jan 7
Edward Manzano Jan 10
Bienvenido Labong Jan 10
Eteuterio Tayabas Jr Jan 14
Hilario Sarah Jan 14
Diosdado Magtur tur Jan 19
Rodrigo Amason Jan 28
Elias Biacolo Jan 28
Cristoto Wedo Feb 1
Jimmy Donsales Feb 1
Octo Edo Feb 1
Felimon Endos Feb 1
Otoy Endos Feb 1
Tawi Lumintaw Feb 1
Eden Por toso Feb 1
DinongTamot Feb 1
Moneto Tamot Feb 1
Tagot Tamot Feb 1
Eving Lumintaw Feb 1
Ating Tonggian Feb 1
Entas Tonggian Feb 1
James Tonggian Feb 1
Mansano Bayang Feb 2
Guillermo Galero Feb 15
William Bragais Mar 1
Jeremias Mallargo Mar 5
Rober t Sayre Mar 5
Teof ilo Lanzaderas Mar 12
Teof ilo Lanzaderas Mar 12
Acmad Baguinda Mar 23
Ali Talusan Apr 14
Rosito Gabijan Apr 19
Seraf in Gagdo Apr 19
Epifanio Puebla Apr 22
Nestor Morales Apr 22
Eddie Masabat Apr 22
Danilo Clayag Apr 22
Kasan Pando Apr 23
“ Cer tain” Carding Apr 25
Teof ilo Castro May 1
Arquelino Maghanoy May 12
Facundo Milagrosa May 12
Oscar Tauro May 14
Juanito Gabiara May 19
Rogelio Dituya May 23
Rogelio Taghap May 23
Cresencio Barnuevo May 25
Cenecio Jhsmin May 28
Alexander Cabrera May 30
Wilfredo Luansing June 10
Vicente Pielgo June 10
Roger Oblino June 10
Tito Abuntao Jr. June 10
Teodorico Raagas Jr. June 13
Lodevico Labatan June 13
Eddie Cer tain June 14
Klogeo Angcon June 14
Pedro Bacongga June 14
Teodulfo Balendres June 14
Graciano Valencio June 19
Musehal Salik June 19
William de Rosa June 20
1981
474646
1981
Danilo Abaqueta June 20
Ehel Galupo June 24
Pilato Dingigo June 24
Odon Jabalisid June 24
Romeo Susing June 26
Francisco Tuballas July 1
Antonio Sta. Ana July 6
Gemeliana Paguio July 7
Rodolfo Dacles July 8
Pastor Armia July 11
Pedro Gabijan July 19
Mermeto Enero July 20
Lupo Busa July 29
Carlito Hara Aug 3
Rominador Laresto Aug 4
Eduardo Laresto Aug 4
Herminio Lising Aug 7
Rogelio Pascua Aug 9
Bienvenido Oblino Aug 10
Eugeno Ebin Aug 15
Jose Mabilangan Aug 15
Clodualdo Duquiatan Aug 15
Iluminada Duquiatan Aug 15
Josef ino Duquiatan Aug 15
Seraf in Gabani Aug 16
Isidro Gabiana Aug 16
Ceriaco Gabijan Aug 16
Cardino Cepriano Aug 18
Dominador Arsenio Aug 21
Wilfredo Bonhoc Aug 21
Baby Jaecten
Jaime Lucero Aug 26
Pablo Morales Aug 26
Capistrano Lucero Aug 26
Abunawas Inedal Aug 29
Sulaiman kamsa Aug 29
Sumalay Talib Aug 29
Manuel Talinjalo Sept
Hermito Tenero Sept 7
Rodrigo Francisco Sept 7
Hague Lucania Sept 9
Irene Badilla Sept 10
Eduardo Dizon Sept 15
Isabel Ramos Sept 15
Juananito Estelloso Sept 16
Ireneo Carreon Sept 17
Nestor Marca Sept 27
Jesus Ajos Oct
Sopranio Ajos Oct
Sebastian Matibag
Marquez Sebastian Matibag Oct 9
Petronillo Gabonada Oct 22
Candido Tampong Jr Oct 31
Alfredo Saballa Nov 6
Elucterio Mabilangan Nov 13
Vivencio Cabarles Nov 14
Armingo Cabarles Nov 14
Oscar Abella Nov 15
Pio Pomarca Nov 15
Nilo Obina Nov 15
Domingo Oblino Nov 15
Ar temio Balitim Nov 15
Lucio Bula Nov 15
Carlito Candido Nov 15
For tunato Cabel Nov 15
Pablo Galo Nov 15
4746 47
1981-1982Fernando Maguo Nov 15
Leodolfo Maguo Nov 15
Yolanda Reymundo Nov 22
Melchor Oblino Nov 27
Francisco Gulit Dec 6
Saturnino Cano Dec 7
Norber to Acebedo
Ulpiano Jaromay Dec 7
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Marcial Asiong Jan 1
Joaquin Montejo Jr. Jan 15
Pedro Jabaan Feb 7
Juanito Abalos Feb 13
Exchor Alejandro Feb 15
Arsenio Jacosal Mar 3
Maria Labong Mar 3
Engracio Labong Mar 3
Sakukong Ayob Mar 9
Juan Banton Mar 15
Marvin Banton Mar 15
Edilber to Guban Mar 15
Gualber to Guban Mar 15
Elino Rada Mar 15
Gemino Sacriz Mar 15
Joaquin Sardo Mar 15
Condrado Dalute Mar 22
Adrionico Soriano Jr. Mar 26
Feliciano Pabres Mar 27
Rober to De la Cruz Apr 7
Jacob Gonzalez Apr 7
Mar tha Abangoen Apr 7
Josep Edomas Apr 8
Tito Calendong Apr 9
Noneto Basiloy Apr 9
Benjamin Bilmen Apr 10
Jose Rilles Apr 10
Quintin Obinguar Apr 27
Rogelio Quijano Apr 28
Armando Mabilangan May 5
Miguel Baez May 8
Joseph Mabana May 10
Vicente Caveiro May 17
Paran Conception Ban May 26
Alexber to Cabrera May 30
Romualdo Dabuet June 6
Abel Jerez July 5
Abundio Presores July 7
Fermen Gabane July 15
Jaime Gabac July 17
Nizar Ibrahim July 20
Oscar Lastimoso July 21
Divino Garcia July 22
Onofre de Mesa July 22
Lodivico Lamatan July 27
Alejandro Bengco Aug 2
Mauricio De Belen Aug 13
Jainudin Abdulkaren Aug 15
Pablo Narcio Aug 20
Rogelio Bascal Sept 15
Binturi Matangal Sept 16
Anastacio Jumalon Sept 25
Perdo Jumalon Sept 25
Simon Adoptante Oct 2
1982
494848
1982-1983
Gene Baliad Oct 2
Rogelio Cotoniel Oct 2
Celso Por tugal Oct 2
Gorgen Repullo Oct 3
Joselito Arzadon Oct 8
Ar f iano Ladiza Oct 12
Simon Adripante Oct 21
Isidro Adapante Oct 21
ServandoI Mata Nov 1
Paquito Luceno Nov 8
Lito Labong Nov 10
Benjamin Bilmen Nov 11
Santiago Aguinaldo Nov 15
Santiago Ramos Nov 15
Guido Raquino Dec 1
Erning Yadao Dec 1
Alber to Reuilo Dec 3
Edwardo Hinay Dec 18
Maurecio Torciende Dec 29
Nestor Onkinco Dec 30
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Adonis Aniskal Jan 1
Rolando Maet Diamban Jan 5
Victor Elorde Jan 8
Diosdado Montiza Jan 8
Rodolfo Tongco Jan 9
Virgie Bustillo Jan 10
Lourdes Landero Jan 10
Gabriel Federiso Jan 13
Emelio Mantalogco Jan 15
CristitutoTaglocop Jan 15
Rober to Taglocop Jan 15
Rober to Amparo Jan 21
Ceferino Flores Jr. Jan 28
Mateo Oquing Jan 28
Domingo Almuente Jan 31
Lito Quilicot Jan 31
Antinio Sambajon Jan 31
Henry Quino Feb 2
Diosdado Ybanez Feb 2
Henry Quino Feb 2
Eufronio Quino Feb 2
Tomas Amistad Feb 8
Nemesio Naraja Feb 12
Eufronio Quino Feb 18
Rudy Borromeo Feb 19
Cornelio Senoc Feb 21
Apolinario Arcasitas Feb 24
Jesus Marquez Iyo Jr. Feb 26
Jesus M. Iyo Jr.
Wilson Raot-raot Mar 1
Julito Olasiman Mar 4
Narciso Letran Mar 10
Adolfo Pahay Mar 10
Geremias Cepe Mar 16
Nestor Doromal Mar 16
Jimmy Abulok Mar 22
Frank H. Esparcia May 25
Remedios I. Esco Mar 28
Yolanda Gordula May 30
Abanacio Obelle Apr 20
Alfredo Cabasa Apr 16
1983
4948 49
1983
Igmedeo Cabasa Apr 16
Anastacio Obelle Apr 20
Arnulfo Espinar May 20
Romeo Landero May 20
Arcosio Ardan May 21
Quintin Velasco May 29
Rodolfo Marzan May 25
Ebrahim Sarabi May 31
Probo Condez Jr. June 3
Salvador Munding June 3
Eddie Aballar June 4
Marcelino Miral June 6
Canostancio Parado June 9
Rudy Palencia June 10
Teddy Rabelista June 11
Gina Lomongo June 12
Teddy Rabelista June 12
Oscar Lumocso June 17
Luis Asita June 21
Rudy Asita June 21
Lorenzo Agustin June 22
Marcelo Silagan July 1
Enrique Giente July 2
Juanito Villarin July 10
Manolito Jayme July 16
Rodrigo Tayco July 19
Olegario Lago Aug 6
Joel Pajalla Aug 7
Sofronio Erguero Aug 11
Caduenas Decario Aug 13
Orlando Espanilla Aug 15
Manuel Lorido Aug 15
Sergio Comision Aug 18
Toto Acibar Aug 23
Enrique Docto Aug 23
Catherine Oliva Aug 25
Marissa Lipanta Aug 25
Nene Lipanta Aug 25
Marcial Alfon Sept 1
Sergio Garcia Sept 8
Rene Hava Sept 8
Carlito Tan Sept 8
Toribio Calagong Sept 10
Bakalula Kamarudin Sept 20
Jose Geronimo Sept 23
Condrado Mavida Sept 23
Wenceslao Mavida Sept 23
Carlito Abogado Sept 23
Geronimo Quimbo Sept 23
Arsenio Sumino Sept 23
Domenador Magpatoc Sept 28
Salvador Legriton
Milagros Navaja Oct 7
Nestor Pescadero Oct 9
Rodolfo Ganas Oct 13
Feliciano Senoc Oct 13
Roseo Senoc Oct 13
Eustequio Senoc Oct 13
Rodolfo Ganas Oct 13
Paulino Dacles Oct 10
Epifanio Ebias Oct 25
Joseph Ingkoy Oct 25
Ibrahim Sarabi Oct 28
Rober tson Ignacio Nov 13
Emmanuel Rosales Nov 13
Rodolfo Wabinggan Nov 13
515050
1983-1984
Pedreto Dacuma Gabeana Nov 15
Elenito Gundaya Dec 7
Roman Algarme Dec 20
Rober to Mabeza Dec 21
Reynaldo Gardose Dec 24
Danilo Apalisok Dec 27
Renato Bautista Dec 27
Gilber to Sumagang Dec 27
Saturnino Cenizal Dec 30
1984NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Ernesto Amet Jan 1
Juliento Montero Jan 1
Bernardo Pilapil Jan 1
Warlito Cemeno Jan 8
Florencia Tunghayan Castillo Jan 8
Mustura Abdulrahiman Jan 15
Buna Abdulrahiman Jan 15
Helario Quimpan Jan 19
Henry Digay Jan 25
Henry Duyag Jan 25
Alfredo Rayno Jan 31
Mauricio Rayno Jan 31
Menez Tabutabo Jan 31
Jonathan Flores Feb 2
Renie Flores Feb 2
Lodovico Canoy Feb 7
Jesus Mabulac Feb 10
Bienvenido Mabulac Feb 10
Juan Estoria Jr. Feb 14
Federico Miral Feb 16
Rosendo Binong Feb 19
Francisco Escorro Feb 19
Teof ilo Escorro Feb 19
Samuel Tambula Feb 19
Osting Tillares Feb 19
Edilber to Negasan Feb 20
Florencio Vallejos Feb 20
Juanito Llego Feb 23
Enrique Leal Feb 27
Amor Tobias Feb 28
Alejandro Balaguer Mar 1
Gerbasya Libre Mar 1
Isagani Marino Mar 3
Delf in Empon Mar 4
Simeon Jagape Jr. Mar 4
Ar temio Maglinte Mar 4
Bienvinido Uray Mar 5
Santiago Reyes Mar 10
Segundina Micabalo Mar 11
Lamber to Yuson Mar 11
Rosalindo Yuson Mar 11
Reynesto Santiago Mar 15
Edito Bersola Mar 15
Bonifacio Duguman Mar 15
Julieto Mahinay Mar 16
Joselito Patorgo Mar 16
Eddie Almonte Mar 17
Rolando Alos Mar 17
Francisco Balucan Mar 17
Danilo Halandumon Mar 17
Jose Jamar Jr. Mar 17
Ricardo Kipkipan Mar 17
Cenon Lague Mar 17
5150 51
1984
Pablo Peraleja
Samy Bucog Mar 22
Francisco Labrador Mar 23
Rober to Tobiano Mar 23
Ernesto Aprovechar Mar 24
Jolly Badayos Mar 26
Eduardo Conf illo Ballesta Apr 2
Eduardo Balesta Apr 2
Clayang Dandan Apr 5
Tripon Clayag Apr 5
Anastacio Esguerra Apr 8
Penajaros Santos Apr 8
Arcadio Yambo Apr 8
Francisca Lonzaga Apr 10
Jose Ricomono Apr 14
Jerry Casong Apr 18
Giosdado Barangan Apr 20
Porperio Gravador Apr 24
Nancy Josol May 6
Rodolfo Booc May 7
Julie Guray May 7
Arsenio Bar tolo May 12
Trinidad Bar tolo May 12
Carlito Bolaquinia May 12
Ray Joel Mahilum May 12
Ronolfo Banquiray May 14
Eugenio Maquirang May 14
Jose De la Cruz May 20
Perlita De la Cruz May 20
Danilo Deldoc Sr. May 20
Reynaldo Yandoc May 20
Marcelo Jose May 21
Henry Catane May 28
Lorenzo Goc-ong Arp 22
Precillano Maat May 23
Eleazar Mante May 28
Eleseo Resma May 28
Juanito Alojepan June 1
Edgar Timbad June 1
Vicente Fajardo June 8
Alber to Pancho June 10
Pedro Marato June 11
Bonifacio Amarillo June 12
Maria Dela Miras June 18
Bernardo Buntag June 18
Rodelio Manaog June 20
Mario Torion June 27
Elsie Ravelo July 5
Norber to Tompong July 5
Larry Catayao July 8
Efren Diaz July 11
Raul Acero July 11
Flordeliza Gorgonia July 11
Hildita Buhiya July 11
Norber to Udtuyan July 14
Zita Carredo July 15
Reynaldo Mendoza July 15
Marcial Ignacio July 15
Mitchie Alejo July 16
Eliseo Cabanias July 16
Pablito Espiridion July 16
Domingo Grantos July 16
Jimmy Lobitos July 16
Dominador Sarse July 16
Cristituto Tanan July 16
Norman Villaboto July 16
535252
1984
Lourdes Samson July 16
Bernardo Buntag July 18
Melencio Luib Jr. July 20
Rodolfo Darwin July 20
Gerardo Naui July 20
Luciano Astigi July 21
Jorge Checa July 21
Jose Tisoy July 22
Danilo Bico July 22
Nona Adin July 24
Antonio Lopez July 27
Danilo Jarito July 28
Francisco Cruz July 30
Rudy Macapayat Aug 1
Melgardo Landero Aug 2
Jerminiano Plutenia Aug 2
Ely Coper Raburar Aug 2
Rolando Obbus Aug 4
Rodolfo Amante Aug 7
Hermeto Lucban Aug 8
Santos Raguing Aug 11
Rober to Villaruez Aug 14
Norber to Udtujan Aug 14
Lando Dawing Aug 15
Gonzalo Columbres Jr. Aug 15
Tiburcio Cubol Aug 19
Rogelio Sullano Aug 24
Henry Hiario Aug 24
Ibrahim Abdullah Aug 25
Cesar Villadores Sept 4
Isidro Cabus Sept 6
Ar turo Laura Sept 17
Arsenio Q Zeneza Sept 17
Lolita Limaco Sept 21
Agustin Barnizo Sept 23
Francisco Lamoste Sept 23
Uldarico Manaog Sept 26
Juanito Picalago Sept 27
Teodora Ibarra Sept 27
Uldarico Manog Sr. Sept 27
Julian Pielago Sept 27
Glecerio Arbiza Sept 29
Ricardo Santillan Oct 2
Romulo Vicente Oct 2
Tirso Maniquez Oct 3
Antonio Echague Oct 4
Manuel Maniquez Oct 8
Fernando Cruz Oct 11
Adriano Tarokan Oct 14
Donio Centeno Oct 14
Gloria Centeno Oct 14
Marciano Talay Oct 15
Immanuel Obispo Oct 17
Benito Sacluti Oct 17
Silvestre Azares Jr. Oct 18
Rogelio Gatilas Oct 18
Ramir Nablo Oct 19
Rodrigo Lucaban Oct 21
Eduardo Guevarra Nov
Prudencio Dacutanan Nov 20
Virgilio Factoran Nov 20
Bodo Andayao Nov 26
Lucia Andayao
Wilfredo dela fuente Nov 29
Roman Echano Nov 30
Lorenzo Cabigon Dec 2
5352 53
1984-1985
Rizal Batiles Dec
1985
Johnny Chavez Jr. Dec 2
Rolando Margate Dec 2
Hectro Pitilla Sr. Dec 2
Almerito Pino-on Dec 2
Hector Petilla Dec 3
Bonifacio Defamonte Dec 3
Ricardo Magdayao Dec 4
Mario Canillo Dec 8
Mario Canonigo Dec 8
Lamac-lamac Torencia Dec 8
Wilfredo Bulan Dec 10
Lorenzo Sachico Cabigon Dec 12
Aquilino kasin Dec 19
Virgilio Factoran Dec 25
Lintoy Placido Dec 27
Joseph Gonzales Dec 30
Romana Carias Dec30
Topino Carias Dec 30
Mario Dali-an Dec 30
Losod Amborno Dec 31
Ramon Palma Dec 31
Jerry Renta Dec 31
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Miguel Amidao Jan 1
Benjamin Ando Jan 1
Juanita Apilit Jan 1
Harrison Arzaga Jan 1
Virgilio Badion Jan 1
Federico Odang Jan 1
Delf in Bualat
Virgilio Bagyao Jan 7
Loreto Calungsod Jan 9
Rolando Lausa Jan 15
Nolinito Munez Jan 20
Alfredo Uray Jan 20
Rolando Tabontabon Jan 20
Wilfredo Alaban Jan 21
Floro Casula Jan 22
Jaime Sungcalang Jan 22
Dominador Table Jan 23
Mondito Calatay Jan 24
Charlito Cabungcag Jan 25
Lucio Macasandiao Jan 25
Gilber to Pangpangan Jan 25
Simeon Sison Jan 27
Winefreda Busbos Jan 29
Glenn Pelaez Jan 29
Danilo Boston Feb 1
Ben Pangan Feb 1
Victoria Ampaloquio Feb 2
Timoteo Olivarez Feb 4
Antonio Branggan Jr. Feb 6
Antonio Branggan Feb 6
Sherlito Jamito Feb 8
Michael Amahan Feb 10
Victor Modrigo Feb 12
Timoteo Mapa Olivarez Feb 14
Efren Lamban Feb 17
Ricardo Cabidig Feb 23
Rolando Asis Feb 25
Nelson Salvacion Feb 25
Helen Juayang Mar 1
555454
1985
Marciano Santos Mar 1
Marcelo Abarca Mar 3
Teof isto Cabillon Mar 3
Pedro Jaban Mar 3
Alex Verbo Mar 3
Roger Jumawid Mar 3
Mario Maglangit Mar 9
Nilo Paculanang Mar 9
Paterno Caputol Mar 10
Allan Parroco Mar 18
Conrado Pal Mar 20
Estriponio Capangpangan Mar 21
Dodong Lagas Mar 23
Mateo Lurupan Mar 23
Francisco Labrador Mar 23
Robit Tobiano Mar 23
Jaime Jamero Mar 25
Tenoy Tagulaylay Mar 28
Bernardo Viajedor Mar 28
Bernardo Nagedor Mar 28
John Seva Mar 29
Emilio Togonon Mar 29
Pactar Calenog Apr 1
Benjamin Navera
Melencio Yanson Apr 4
Cirilo Campo Apr 5
Lourdesio Obsioma Apr 5
Renato Baunites Apr 7
Aniceto Cagadas Apr 7
Reneboy del Rosario Apr 7
Alejandro Gemongala Apr 7
Montella Santos Apr 7
Zainudin Bangon Apr 10
Emmanuel Catong Apr 11
Jerry Casona Apr 18
Leonardo Dagas Apr 18
Gabino Tanaid Apr 18
Edito Bersola Apr 19
Jerry Caraca Apr 23
Teodora Gonzales Apr 23
Juan Matiga Apr 23
Ruben Nollora Apr 23
Hilario Tagudin Apr 28
Rogelio Torregosa May 1
Flaviano Navarro May 3
Samuel Sajulga May 4
Florencio Daniel May 5
Rogelio Ganadin May 7
Romeo Rag May 8
Rober to Bantitan May 9
Baho Pedro May 10
Antonio Nohon May 14
Cesar Mamon May 15
Sekeles Ronjaco May 15
Geodimcio Medina May 15
Jovinal Durilag May 17
Eleno Villas May 19
Jose Andalay May 21
Jaime Dagasuan May 22
Emmanuel Pardalis May 22
Jose Sumapad May 23
Charlo Abueva May 24
Orlando Gonzalo May 26
Joel Jimenez May 26
Romeo Jimenez May 26
Andres Awid May 27
5554 55
1985
Pablo Awid May 27
Paulino Pondara May 27
Christoper Celicious May 28
Florencio Daniel May 31
Andres Tion June 1
Severino Sayat
Simplicio Anino Jr
Engracio Labong
Melencio Lueb
Jesus Atos
Antonio Sta.Ana
Amante Salvador
Baldocantos Balodoy
Wilfredo Cagas
Antonio Cagas
Boy Cayapasan
Ireneo Carreon
Antonio Echague
Ricardo Espelita
Ignacio Nilo
Napoleon Layag
Marcelino Lucaban
Facundo Milagros
Carlito Navarro
Nestor Narca
Mateo Ogquepo
Justino Pascua
Pablo Palingkud
Loreta Planar
Domingo Pantulan
Mamerto Ray Ruiz Granados
Enrico Remalita
Romero Enrique
Jose Ricafor te
Herculano Rama
Tarukan Amicia
Anastacio Demerin June 3
Lorenzo Calungsod June 4
Ireneo Gario June 4
Venerando Villacillio June 10
Ricardo Lascona June 14
Nenita Mendoza June 15
Marcelino Coming June 17
Vicente Dawa June 17
Luciano Lawas June 17
Boy Socades June 17
Ireneo Pruta June 17
Vevencio Gonzales June 18
Brendo Pelucio June 19
Reynaldo Recoleto June 19
Delf in Magadan June 20
Rosendo Magadan June 20
Victorino Magadan June 20
Serapin Alvia June 21
Marcelino Neri June 22
Cirilo Rubio June 22
Cirilo Tadlip June 22
Eleazar Tubal June 22
Tayon Naya June 30
Antonio Tacuyan June 30
Laida Tacuyan June 30
Sarah Tacuyan June 30
Dioscaro Buenaventura July 1
Jonny Buenaventura July 1
Dominador Barias July 1
Aniceta Waslo July 4
575656
1985
Florentino Galarpe July 5
Arsenio Igmedio July 9
Nestor Ybanez July 11
Rudy Romano July 11
Roland Levi Ybanez July 11
Rober to Bantilan July 14
Ricardo Lacona July 14
Claudio Ca-ay July 15
Manuel Lucero Jr. July 15
Iglecerio Unyong July 15
Serguio Velasco July 15
Eulogio Tadlip July 17
Ruf ino Ancoy July 18
Rodrigo Laido July 18
Aurella de Jesus July 18
Pedro Laido July 23
Enecito Luad July 23
Beneto Zosaz July
Dante Frondoso July 27
Ruper to Aguirre Jr. July 30
Joebel Bentic July 30
Santiago Escarpe July 30
Benito Sipsip July 31
Julieto Doc-doc Aug 2
Alber to Moreno Aug 2
Ronima Pacquiao Aug 4
Mario Sagrado Jr. Aug 4
Urbano Bodiongan Aug 5
Edgardo Canete Aug 6
Madera Madera Aug 9
Ma. Victoria Matilde Espano Aug 9
Romeo Sebugan Aug 10
Samuel Padayugdog Aug 11
Marianito Abaencia Aug 13
Medarlo Manuel Aug 13
Edgardo Mangadlaw Aug 17
Rodrigo Quizo Aug 17
Alber to Yurong Aug 17
Francisco Ocenar Aug 21
For tunato Pacomios Aug 21
Soledad Salvador Aug 24
Nilo Valerio Aug 24
Agusto Fermanis Aug 24
Resteta Fernandez Aug 24
Cresteta Fernandez Aug 25
Dario Gawisao Aug 25
Donato Villarubia Jr. Aug 25
Rogelio Alfonso Aug 26
Reynaldo Buan Aug 26
Eleuterio Laurito Aug 26
Rogelio Alfonso Aug 26
Villamor Balibis Aug 26
Eddie Demerin Aug 27
Jose Descano Aug 27
Alber t Enriquez Aug 28
Nestor Sta. Ana Aug 28
Hermogenes Boreros Aug 29
Alfred Cupat Aug 31
Bebe Cupat Aug 31
Fernando Dela Pena Aug 31
Hermie Mahasol Sept 2
Felipe Retita Sept 2
Carlos Madali Sept 3
Rober to Patangan Sept 5
Edu Tormis Sept 5
Rey Camis Sept 6
5756 57
1985
Benjamin Swer te Sept 6
Celso Dadia-on Sept 8
Alfredo Logrosa Sept 12
Oscar Logrosa Sept 12
Reynaldo Napili Sept 14
Roseminda Gumampo Sept 17
Aquilio Guminta Sept 17
Ronie Rapal Sept 17
Bienvenido Pitogo Sept 19
Julies Taparo Sept 21
Lino Taparo Sept 21
Ernesto Empleo Sept 21
Gemma Empleo Sept 21
Jessica Empleo Sept 21
Maximo Empleo Sept 21
Marcel Roxas Sept 25
Alber to Lentuco Sept 26
Jaime Acuram Sept 27
Mario Acuram Sept 27
Pacif ico Acuram Sept 27
Maximo Lagumbay Sept 27
Felipe Clave Sept 29
Pastor Molino Sept 29
Felixber to Sescom Sept 29
Clarita Sibuco Sept 29
Nestor Mondega Oct 1
Peter Aninon Oct 4
Luzminda Albeloros Oct 5
Lucresia Monggal Oct 5
Dindo Suminod Oct 5
Francisco Monggal Oct 5
Cerilo Tamparong Oct 5
Dolores Pineda Oct 7
Nestor Batilong Oct 10
Jovel Tamparong Oct 10
Leah Amidao Oct 10
Antonio Ugdao Oct 10
Epinito Halasan Oct 12
Angelito Laurito Oct 13
Victorio Trinquete Oct 13
Berino Noot Oct 14
Melanio Pal Oct 15
Domingo Pal Oct 15
Reynalado Pal Oct 15
Omarlito Robles Oct 16
Hernando Gamit Oct 17
Benito Sacusti Oct 17
Gaudeoso Sabillo Oct 17
Garciano Garidos Oct 18
Pedro Tormes Oct 19
Teodorico Baba Oct 19
Raul Pacete Oct 23
Valeriano Ombay Oct 24
Romeo Rendon Oct 27
Richard Trillo Dolizon Oct 29
Por ferio Agay Oct 29
Mariano Acebuche Oct 30
Pedro Paradero Oct 30
Fructuoso Ejercito Oct 31
Emmanuel Casulla Nov 2
Evangeline Tuganas Nov 2
Egnasio Labong Nov 2
Jim Gabiana Nov 3
Hermino Catigan Nov 3
Marcos Medalla Nov 3
Telisporo C Doculan Nov 3
595858
1985
Herminio Catigan Nov 4
Vicente Abella Nov 5
Raymundo Ellano Nov 5
Marcelino Lucaban Nov 5
Jovito Velasco Nov 5
Romulo Rosales Nov 6
Celedonio Mondido Nov 8
Henry Delumbar Nov 9
Filex Gemarino Nov 9
Elizabeth Resma Nov 10
Crispin Traya Nov 10
Ireneo Monsanto Nov 11
Eliseo Orbeta Nov 11
Alfredo Tabontabon Nov 11
Nilo Ignacio Nov 13
Hilario Malanday Nov 15
Ranilo Baueos Nov 17
David Barrios Jr. Nov 19
Consolatrix Rentoria Dapilos Nov 20
Leonardo Bantilan Nov 25
Orlando Gonzales Nov 25
Helario Malanday Nov 25
Bodo Andayao Nov 26
Lucia Andayao Nov 26
Rogelio Iran Nov 26
Patricio Jao-jao Nov 26
Lindo Ega Nov 26
Patricio Jawjaw Nov 26
Welio Nalam Nov 28
Rogelio Ocate Nov 29
Josephine Reyes Nov 29
Consolatrix Dapilos Nov 30
Dionesio Aliga Dec 1
Jesus Arcilla Dec 1
Francisco Cumayas Dec 3
Fernando Quiambao Dec 4
Andresita Cagadas Dec 7
Sabeniano Sarceda Dec 9
Venecio Geromo Dec 9
Danilo Gonzales Dec 11
Emerso Supsupin Dec 11
Elpidio Supsupin Dec 11
Agustin Baguio Dec 11
Danilo Gonzales Dec 11
Nilo A Olegario Jr. Dec 12
Antonio Tagbacuda Dec 14
Ruel Balendres Dec 14
Rio Balendres Dec 14
David De. Vera Dec 18
Saturnino Odian Dec 18
Gregorio Odian Dec 18
Eleuterio Gumamay Dec 17
Seraf in Albia Dec 20
Ruben Banhao Dec 23
Margarito Maestre Dec 23
Cristino Tarrobago Dec 25
Crosimo Caputol Dec 26
Ponciano De la Cruz Dec 27
Rogelio Cor tel Dec 28
Cosme Arcasitas Dec 29
Elena Bayana
5958 59
1986
1986NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Carlos Azarcon Jan 1
Danilo Magsanos Jan11
Benito Jimenez Jan 16
Reynaldo Agustin Jan 17
Esmeraldo Almazan Jan 17
Arnulfo Rodriguez Jan 17
Diosdado Hicale Jan 18
Marcelo Jabasa Jan 23
Arsenio Perez Jan 24
Renieboy Credo Jan 25
George Acbayan Jan 26
Victoriano Bautista Jan 30
Bernandino Deleger Feb 2
Donato Torre Feb 2
Jesse Pascua Feb 9
Lucrecio Antonio Feb 10
Julio Maniacup Feb 16
Ernesto Bacani Feb 17
Dasol Nanquil Feb 17
Regino Sabal Feb 21
Norber to Acebedo Feb 27
Bienvenido Amacan Mar 1
Eusebio Sumugat Mar 7
Rolly Dahil-dahil Mar 19
Loreto Versoza Mar 25
Aritumba Bautista Mar 25
Nicolas Badando Apr 5
Emilio Luban Apr 10
Romelo Baluskang May 1
Narciso Mallari May 2
Apolinario Bolhano May 15
Jose Sumapad May 23
Teof ilo Paluray June 3
Francisco Bernaldo June 17
Jose Broquisa June 28
Pepe Cabasan June 28
Grace Gregorio July 14
Jose Yuma July 18
Expedito Aranjuez July 24
Mercurion Cabradilla July 24
Joel Lopez Aug 22
Ildefonso Palanog Aug 28
Cabales Alojado Sept 1
Rober to Jabagat Sept 1
Rodrigo Forcadela Sept 14
Rico Ebuen Sept 10
Rodrigo Forcadela Sept 14
Supring Catacio Sept 26
Cosme Arcasitas Sept 28
Estrella Nor tar te Oct 1
David Cabilleda Oct 15
Vicente Pielago Oct 17
Remegio Riopay Oct 20
Ireneo Castillano Oct 25
Joel Samson Oct 27
Ronulfo Tabera Nov 1
Rosita Culanag Nov 3
Joselito Dizon Nov 11
Joselito Valones Nov 11
Jonathan Fernandez Nov 12
Nicolas Sacy Nov 15
Glecerio Lorana Nov 16
Limbuaton Calom Nov 27
616060
1986-1987
Danilo Bargayo Dec 1
Jimmy Bargayo Dec 1
Melencio Espana Dec 1
Elpidio Supsupin Dec 11
Emerson Supsupin Dec 11
Jimmy Dionisio Dec 17
Dennis Espanola Dec 25
1987NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Diomedes Paligat Jan 1
Gemma Paligat Jan 1
Adele Kaleste Jan 17
Noel Baculna Feb 1
Jose Mamon Feb 23
Alex Serrano Feb 23
Wilfredo Gargoles Feb 24
Eugenia Daridag Mar 1
David Gabiana Mar 7
Ismael Jose Mar 10
Jaime Lopez, Sr. Mar 20
Tenestocles Saavedra Mar 21
Reynaldo Garcia Mar 28
Rodolfo Sagang Mar 28
Federico Lopez, Jr. Apr 3
Teresita Demerin Apr 7
Gregorio Amusco Apr 25
Enarciso Paner Apr 25
Rosie Paner Apr 25
Miguel Elladora Apr 26
Matranillo Malinao Apr 26
Edna Velez Apr 26
Rodrigo Gallego Apr 27
Mauricio Narvaja, Sr. Apr 27
Tomas Pilapil Apr 30
Diony Academia May 6
Marissa Nombre May 6
Nenita Villalobos May 6
Antonio Ilustrismo May 7
Alesio Nacion May 10
Santiago Laroya May 12
Jose Paor May 23
Gerry Caburnay May 27
Romeo Bangkal June 4
Mario Pogoy June 4
Leo Sta. Rita June 4
Astrophel Cruz June 8
Evangeline Rubli June 8
Arcadio Ramirez June 9
Macario Lapinig June 10
Alber to Salamat June 10
Fernando Mandala June 14
Hermias Honggay June 22
Loreto Honggay June 22
Rodrigo Honggay June 22
Eufemio Mallari June 25
Mario Asis June 26
Arnulfo Cualbar July 1
Cirilo Pacundo July 8
Modesto Pimentel July 10
George Bantolo July 15
Victorio Baylon July 25
Ernesto Pacao July 26
Wilfredo Patis July 28
Armando Por tajada July 31
6160 61
1987-1988
Simeon Laca Aug 1
Aniceto Hermita Aug 3
Lef ti Mahinay Aug 7
Luis Montilla Aug 7
Pablo Cruz Aug 10
Eugenio Demerin Aug 15
Eddie Pili Aug 15
Augia Casaclang Aug 22
Mamerto Dupo Aug 22
SauloLumadao Aug 26
Mario Ontic Aug 29
Myrna Calambro Sept 1
Virgilio Domingo Sept 3
Virgilio Diego Sept 16
Willie Laxamana Sept 16
Antonio Mercado Sept 16
Bienvenido Abarientos Sept 20
Raynefredo Losabia Sept 21
Sarlito Cainos Oct 1
Vincente Valor, Sr. Oct 1
Jimmy Malicdem Oct 8
Erwin Alba Oct 10
Lito Asibar Oct 13
UldaricoPagunsan Oct 20
Norma Cervantes Oct 27
Felimono Talidong, Jr. Oct 27
Arnelle Mendoza Oct 30
Primitivo Dinolan Nov 1
Jose Villano Nov 11
Antonio Alcontin Nov 14
Antonio Cayetona Nov 14
Edgardo Estojero Nov 14
Elpidio de la Cruz Nov 24
Cesar Buenaventura Dec 10
Rodolfo Heraga, Jr. Dec 10
Jef frey Balangat Dec 14
Victor Rosatase Dec 16
Daniel Langote Dec 22
Teodoro Wenceslao Dec 23
Urbano Bacol Dec 27
1988NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Bienvenido Pellado Jan 4
Joseph Francisco Jan 10
Macario Abasola Jan 18
Pedro Dumit Jan 20
Emiliano Jalalon Jan 20
Dario Jalalon Jan 20
Buenaventura Corson Jan 22
Rober to Mahilum Jan 28
Maximo Manabat Jan 31
Epifanio Gucela Feb 13
Corazon Navidad Feb 13
Mario Jereza Feb 15
Ramon Mercado Feb 15
Franklin Ramos Feb 16
Joseph Gile Feb 18
Roger De Los Santos Feb 21
Alfredo Gerse Feb 29
Alber to Villanueva Mar 10
Jaime Velasco Mar 15
636262
1988
Biato Nahid Mar 18
Rosarita Nahid Mar 18
Alejandro Casidsid Mar 22
Ricardo Casidsid Mar 22
Ruf ino Casidsid Mar 22
Heminio Demif iles Mar 22
Mario Javier Mar 22
Diki-diki Lumogdang Mar 22
Marciso Samillano Mar 22
Florencio Sinaylohan, Jr. Mar 22
Alber to Teodoro Mar 22
Rober to Teodoro Mar 22
Ar temioTughap Mar 22
Nequito Gaupo Mar 23
Angelito Joaquin Mar 23
Eugenio Parane Mar 29
Noriel Parane Mar 29
Corazon Lintag Mar 30
Conrado Manuyag Mar 31
Nilo Ababon Apr 1
Noel Escaner Apr 1
Rober to Pascual, Sr. Apr 7
Enrique Reloj Apr 7
Fernando Agasan Apr 8
Joseph Bautista Apr 9
Carlito David Apr 9
Rodolfo David Apr 9
Ronalfo David Apr 9
Sammy de Castro Apr 9
Joel Flores Apr 9
Jesus Francisco Apr 9
Roel Alvero Apr 13
Madelyn Bangonon Apr 15
Wilfredo Bangonon Apr 15
Corsene Bangonon Apr 15
Moises Koleste Apr 17
Rodolfo Adora May 3
Ricardo Baluyut May 3
Narciso Dino May 4
Jose Discayno May 8
Edgar Andrino May 9
Edwin Avejoro May 9
Armando Broqueza May 9
Francisco Echavez May 9
Celso Epa May 9
Herman Orolfo May 9
Romeo Española May 11
Gerardo Fernandez May 11
Orano Santiago May 17
Elizalde Casipong May 24
Cornelio Alea, Jr. May 26
Manuel de Jesus May 30
Rudy Paner June 3
Renato Topacio June 20
Diosdado De La Cruz June 22
Cesar Cepe June 26
Alex Mago June 28
Manuel Saldo June 29
Efren Aposaga, jr. July 10
Felix Medalla July 11
Ruben Florete July 13
Ziloteo Panes July 13
Armando Cedro, Sr. July 14
Sonny Cor tejo July 15
Leopoldo Leorico July 15
Agapito Mar f il July 15
6362 63
1988-1989
Noe Albao July 20
Nelson Reyes July 28
Alejandro Sarile July 28
Lucia Madayan Aug 1
Jeremy Vasquez Aug 1
Wilfredo Balsa Aug 2
Angelito Mayordomo Aug 2
Romeo Nikor Aug 3
Edwin Torrena Aug 3
Francisco de Las Santos Aug 13
Crispin Cornelio Aug 18
Mario Dinglaoso Aug 18
Gertrudo Barolo Aug 20
Simlicio Anino Jr. Aug 26
Raul Quiros Aug 26
Andy Griego Aug 28
Antonio Carillo Sept 1
Mercelino Tampil Jr. Sepy 1
Jaime Café Sept 6
Jovencio Abog Sept 7
Eduardo Carlos Sept 9
Hilario Ines Sept 9
Democrito Sangga Sept 9
Benjie Lumogdang Sept 12
Virgilio Kabiling Sept 15
Bernardo Sangga Sept 19
Buenaventura Carreon Sept 22
Virgilio Tundag Sept 30
David de Mesa Oct 6
Saulo de Castro Oct 6
Leonardo Bordan Oct 10
Manolo Malikay Oct 15
Bernardo Rodriguez Oct 21
Dorado Rio Oct 22
Felimina Rio Oct 22
Antonio Dacaldacal Oct 23
Elmer Aldea Oct 28
Benjamin Lazaro Oct 29
Potenciano Francisco Nov 2
Antonio Laberon Nov 2
Danny Laberon Nov 2
Nonoy Laberon Nov 2
Deding Tomnob Nov 2
Rudy Tomnod Nov 2
Alexandro Nacua Nov 8
Efren Bonagua Nov 9
Luciano Vaf lor Nov 13
Romeo Balagtas Nov 20
Bernabie Lastimoso Nov 27
Bernardo Liwanag Dec 2
Jose De Los Reyes Dec 3
Roque Montero Dec 3
Lorenzo Abalo Jr. Dec 11
Buenafe Dailisan Dec 21
Velentina Lumactod Dec 21
Carlito Sahulga Dec 31
1989NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Elpedio Sescon Jan 1
Ariston Lepalim Jan 8
Manuel Rueda Jan 8
Oliver Ventura Jan 16
Bernardo Flores Jan 29
Edgardo Flores Jan 29
656464
1989
Enrico Flores Jan 29
Nelson Carpentero Feb 3
Paul Tapia Mar 14
Doroteo Paglinawan Mar 15
Bayane Gaupo Mar 18
Ambrosio Santiago Mar 27
Anselmo Malgue Mar 29
Victor Nunez Jr. Apr 4
Crisanto Cordova Apr 12
Pedro Deang Apr 12
Benjamin Mar tin Apr 12
Nestor Mercado Sr. Apr 12
Oscar Santos Apr 12
Felipe Sagmon Apr 15
Lauro Velasquez Apr 22
Angelina Llanaresas Apr 26
Ma. Nona Sta. Clara Apr 26
Felix Cadrano May 1
Luis de Castro May 1
Jaime Escarcha May 1
Rodolfo Obusan May 1
Rodolfo Colandog May 1
Aron Latoza May 14
Joelito Segayle May 15
Jesus Tagal May 16
Ronell Tampipi May 26
Reynaldo Somono May 28
Remigio Bon May 31
Romeo Camongay June 1
Nemensio Niepes June 10
Gelle Ibay June 13
Felisio Abendan June 27
Marilyn Somera June 29
Crisostomo Canuto Jr. July 2
Beth Balila July 6
Paulino Baguio July 15
Violeta De Guzman July 28
Nigo Dumayog Aug 1
Feliciano Curato Aug 3
Manolo Noleal Aug 5
Manuel Gumueda Aug 8
Carmelito Leiza Aug 8
Alfredo Catague Aug 9
Igmedio Borresco Aug 19
Rogelio Rebucan Aug 28
Geliciano Valerio Sept 7
Larry Miranda Sept 10
Simplicio Pacionila Sept 21
Anastacio Bangkal Sept 27
Socorro Mirabueno Sept 29
Miguel Gonzaga Sept 29
Hernani Lorenzo Oct 5
Florentino Maquelan Oct 20
Romeo Espanilla Oct 27
Victor Matias Oct 27
Ruben Espanilla Nov 1
Rodjie Tacuyo Nov 2
Ricky Campo Nov 4
Renante Villar te Nov 5
Clement Samson Nov 20
Marcos Lumagdong Nov 22
Antonio Santos Nov 22
Romerico Labanacruz Nov 26
Noel Fajardo Dec 5
Rober to Najarro Dec 23
6564 65
1990
1990NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Maximiano Mesina Jan 2
Antonio Buenvista Jan 7
Benhur Cometa Jan 7
Alejandro Ignacio Jan 7
Arnel Javier Jan 15
Armando Busa Jan 17
Charita Razon Jan 17
Rodrigo Apana Jan 23
Diomedes Abawag Jan 29
Nestor Loberio Jan 29
Alexander Laparan Feb 3
Pascual San Diego Feb 3
Jimmy Abalo Feb 6
Efren Conception Feb 11
Nicolas Lopez Feb 11
Reynaldo Santos Feb 11
Rober to Lopez Feb 15
Felipe Leonidas Jr. Feb 22
Louie De Guzman Feb 23
Nemesio Agay Mar 2
Edgardo Canlapan Mar 12
Andres Dagaas Mar 18
Rober to Rivera Mar 27
Arnel Lubal Apr 6
Seraf in Guese Apr 8
Ernesto Bestudio Apr 30
Allan Gitanes Apr 30
Romeo Delas May 13
Felino de la Cruz May 14
Leonardo De Los Santos May 16
Candelario Villar te May 22
Ruben Mangay-at May 23
Amelia Tena May 25
Ramon Punzalan June 5
Geminiano Gualber to Jr. June 16
Manuel Manaog June 16
Nelson Villar te June 22
Monina Belenario July 10
Escolastico Cuachin Jr July 20
Felipe Corson July 23
Edmundo Carias Aug 8
Ladislao Pilones Aug 11
Leonardo Enriquez Aug 23
Ruben Novicio Aug 25
Rene Espanol Aug 29
Rodrigo Calupit Sept 2
Armando Listana Sept 2
Candelario Camansi Sept 24
Jimmy Badayos Oct 3
Benjamin Coyang Oct 3
Nilo Talaman Oct 16
Arnulfo Calingcag Oct 27
Ronnie Reyes Nov 5
Nicasio Roxas Nov 12
Rico Dosdos Nov 18
Edmundo Sarmiento Nov 24
Sandro Bulala Nov 27
Pedro Reotutar Nov 27
Edgardo Sarmiento Dec 6
Bonifacio Guillano Dec 6
Noel Merelos Dec 7
Nancy Canua Dec 26
Arlene Del Rosario Dec 26
676666
1991-1992
Antonio Ilego Dec 28
Rodolfo Laporga Dec 28
1991NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Jose Cadavos Jan 1
Melanie Pacao Jan 14
Gaspar Patriarca Jr. Jan 24
Ruben Dumalaon Jan 25
Rolando Laguilles Mar 2
Rene De Guzman Mar 4
Romulo Conejar Mar 5
Heldegario Havana Mar 5
Jerome Mangino Mar 17
Rico Licup Mar 28
Noli Macadat Mar 28
Nelson Pajara Mar 30
Alejandro Gayon Apr 2
Conchito Labay Apr 2
Fernando Labine Apr 2
Rodolfo Ramoneda Apr 2
Melencio Chavez Apr 4
Eulogio Manikar May 1
Lito Severo May 4
Rowena Pastorite May 12
Rosita Patinti May 12
Sonny Arevalo June 1
Vicente Mabuyo June 1
Alejandro Panawan June 9
Remito Udtuhan June 20
Carlito Caluag July 2
Ramon Cunan July 9
Renato Zabate Sept 1
Danilo David Sept 10
Edmundo Mataba Oct 5
Arnulfo Sevilla Oct 29
Jacinto Opena Dec 7
Bonifacio Gatinao Dec 11
1992NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Crisanta Ayacayde Jan 1
Dominador Tucaste Jan 1
Ar temio Reconalla Jr. Jan 21
Antonio Frayco Feb 23
Enriquito Jarito Mar 1
Romulo Trompo Mar 1
Cornelio Berandal Mar 6
Ramon Palomar Mar 6
Vicente Locaber te Mar 11
Ruben De Vera Mar 26
Jose Soliven Mar 30
Emile Sosmena Apr 4
Edwin Aboli Apr 16
Marcos Domanog Apr 17
Felimon Cabanatan Apr 18
Jaime Cabohocan Apr 18
Rober to Caro May 6
Antonio Abulon May 18
Orofre De Mesa May 31
Sixto Mirador Sr. May 31
Cenido Oyuwan June 2
Florantino Hinampos June 7
Renato Gitanes June 20
Ramon Himo June 20
6766 67
1992-1998
Noli Junio Aug 1
Ernesto Kalan Aug 4
Domingo Limbangan Aug 4
Rene Maquiling Aug 30
Crisrino Jumao-as Sept 2
Gading Sumangkay Sept 26
Cristito Esplana Oct 2
Pedro Oliva Oct 10
Germelindo Pizon Oct 19
Cristituto Daniel Oct 23
Cesar Bonganay Oct 28
Gaudencia Pizon Oct 28
Marcelino Emit Nov 10
NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of AbductioN
Romeo Legaspi Jan 11
Kamal Ducar Feb 14
Ramon Amican Feb 15
Kusman Gunday Mar 15
Enrique Bero Mar 18
1993
Julio Rapol Mar 18
Roger Hamog June 13
Jesus Villapando June 17
Mercy Grande June 20
Cita Mahusay June 20
Didsy Mahusay June 20
Joemer Mahusay June 20
Roger Arcilla July 7
Jimmy Capunpon July 7
Camudise Taplan July 10
Ceriaco Geolone Oct 20
Norber to Tatoy Nov 1
Fernando Blanco Dec 3
Flavio Sabino Dec 6
Singapol Abdugani Dec 12
1994NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Orlando Bacani July 17
Pedring Claro July 17
Primitive Robes Aug 28
1995NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Rolly Guanzon Mar 12
Jose Recana Mar 12
Mariano Recana Mar 12
Noel Campilan Apr 28
Alfonso Hernando Oct 17
Romeo Torreda Dec 29
1997NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Romeo Cor tez Apr 1
Gaudencio Devaras July 12
Jeevee Patalita July 12
Nicolas Ruiz July 12
1998NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Jimmy Tuan Mar 1
Jonathan Tuan Mar 1
696868
1999-2003
Remilo Basalan Mar 28
Roel Destresa Mar 28
Danilo Caisip Dec 8
Jayson Nieva Dec 8
1999NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Prodencio Bati-on Mar 1
Roderick Personila Dec 30
2000NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Jessie Lara Jan 21
Ortiz Francisco Mar 22
Abdul Malaydan Mar 22
Monsor Alilisan May 7
Tuhami Dalanda May 7
Haron Lupon May 7
Vivencio Paceo June 20
Aidal Dapitanon June 30
Ar temio Ayala Jr. Oct 14
Joseph Belar Oct 14
Arnold Dangquisan Oct 14
Jovencio Lagare Oct 14
Diosdado Oliver Oct 14
Romualdo Orcullo Oct 14
2001NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Rodrigo Doria Apr 2
Onofre Diaz Apr 2
Dennis Menidilla Apr 18
Leovy Javier May 4
Bernabe Leynes Aug 20
Allan Alazar Sept 22
Larry Aparato Sept 22
Allan Germozino Sept 22
Muhidin Sulaiman Oct 10
Hasan Amada Oct 10
Pablo Usop Sulaiman Oct 10
Joseph Agpao Oct 11
Clarita Regondola Nov 16
2002NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Rowena Bayani Feb 2
Edwin Villaluz Feb 2
Honorio Ayroso Feb 9
Johnny Orcino Feb 9
Mary Jane De Guzman Apr 23
Jhonny Luario Apr 23
Efren Tubigan Apr 24
Mohaliddin Usman May 7
Inunay Unig July 24
Domingo de las Alas 0ct 7
Victor Saducos Nov 28
2003NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Carding Bendong Jan 19
Kasiran Jailani Jan 19
Zaida Anok Jan 27
Tongatong Masukat Jan 27
6968 69
2003-2005
Bangkas Montawal Jan 27
Maraning Sugagil Musa Jan 27
Ber ting Tabo Jan 27
Norodin Tabo Jan 27
Saddam Tabo Jan 27
Udad Tabo Jan 27
Anthony Bilano Mar 21
Reggie Espinosa Mar 24
Untoy Agaw Mar 30
Muslimin Maro Apr 1
Juanita Ybanez Apr 1
Ladjma Jumdail Apr 1
Dieto Indico Apr 3
Abdulah Ala Sabdura Apr 3
Zulkif le Alimmudin Apr 6
Uztads Alimudin Zullilple Apr 7
Lino Bernardino May 24
Jonathan Benaro Sept 9
Lito Doydoy Sept 9
Ramon Ragase Sept 9
Marjorie Reynoso Sept 9
Miguel Banados Sept 23
Ramonito Delante Nov 4
Elias Telo Nov 4
Rendon Amal Nov 4
2004NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Rolando Por taleza Feb21
Jacqueline Paguntalan Feb21
Jaime Rodriguez Mar 1
Sonny Boy delos Santos Mar 5
Ariel Candelaria Mar 5
Pedro Bueta Mar 13
Wilfredo Velarde Mar 16
Joseph Carlote Mar 16
Resty Amata Mar 23
Gregorio Remolin Jr. Apr 21
Carpit Jimlan Apr 30
Arnold Gubat Aug 13
Amen Gubat Aug 13
Sombra Gubat Aug 13
Inpet Gubat Aug 13
Hassan Gubat Aug 13
Someda Gubat Aug 13
Amera Gubat Aug 13
Boy Tumidao Aug 15
Joseph Gonzales Aug 18
Rolando Comiso Aug 18
Mario Detroz Aug 18
Mabini Wandale Aug 31
Jocelyn Castigador Oct 6
Dawing Senyor Oct 10
Dawing Senior Oct 18
Jun Espinol Oct 24
Dawbe Cugihan Dec 4
2005NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Patricio Abalos Mar 28
Esteban Pastor Feb 11
Emelito Ocenar Feb 11
Sergio Viray Feb 18
Roger Viray Feb 18
717070
2005-2006
Danilo Macapagal Mar 3
Julius Termo Mar 9
Jose Mayon Sinad Mar 12
Paquito Ladisa Mar 28
Patricio Abalos Mar 28
Alejo Saludario Apr 2
Joel Amahan Apr 4
Lolong Casil Apr 4
Arnulfo Casil Apr 4
Lowi Casil Apr 4
Narciso Parani Apr 22
Jovito Velasco Apr 22
Naldito Centino Apr 22
Sonny Quebada Apr 22
Bernie Santos Apr 24
Joel Amahan May 5
Antonio Tamparong May 7
Loreto Jacinto May 7
Rober to Babas May 21
Liklik Cabigayan May 21
For tunato Jacinto May 21
Lilencio Edosma May 22
Edwin Nuqui June 16
Armando Barquillo July 26
Cecila Esteban Oct 2
Richard Callado Sept 30
Ar thur Aguila Nov 11
Demerly Adriano Cruz Dec 5
Perseus Geogoni Dec 5
Datu Abdul Salah Sabdurah Dec 12
2006NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Abdulgani Pagao Jan 17
Julkipli Eli Jan 25
Francis Desacula Jan 29
Darwin Terno Feb 1
Robin Solano Feb 1
Pedro Saquen Feb 1
Ricardo Valmocina Jr. Feb 1
Ernesto Capitli Feb 3
Josephine dela Cruz Feb 9
Raymond Manalo Feb 14
Reynaldo Manalo Feb 14
Annabele Bigkay Feb 18
Joey Estreber Mar 3
Levi Labong Mar 4
Rogelio Concepcion Mar 6
Valentine Katigbak Mar 13
Raunil Mor tejo Mar 17
Noli Gabales Mar 24
Eduardo Borromeo Mar 29
Ronaldo Sagabala Mar 29
Ronald Intal Apr 3
Eddie Boy dela Torre Apr 13
Eddie Pornedos Apr 17
Eric de Mesa Apr 17
Bernabe Mendiola Apr 17
Junior Pornedos Apr 17
Randy Gollen Apr 17
Jef frey Calicas Apr 17
Jun Nasar Apr 17
Indo Casimiro Apr 17
Mark Soleybar Apr 17
Renato Tena Apr 17
7170 71
2006-2007
Raymond Rondina Apr 17
Jessica Villiran Apr 20
Rommel Avendano Apr 22
Bryan Corpuz Macalisang Apr 30
Marilou Viudes May 5
Manuel Sioson May 5
Benedicto Magdaong May 5
Leoniso Ragudos May 6
Philip Limjoco May 8
Roland Por ter May 16
Virgilio Tranquilino May 17
Fidel Palting May 21
Dionelo Borres May 28
Rober to Marapo May 28
Bernard Javier June 3
Rogelio Calubad June 16
Gabriel Calubad June 16
Leopoldo Ancheta June 24
Manuel Merino June 26
Sherlyn Cadapan June 26
Karen Empeno June 26
Celina Palma June 26
Gloria Soco June 26
Prudencio Calubid June 26
Ariel Beloy June 26
Tessie Abelllera July 13
Philip dela Cruz July 20
Danilo Malapit July 28
Nicolas Sanches Oct 3
Heherson Medina Oct 3
Laureano Galicia Oct 13
Gloria Canaval Oct 25
Federico Intese Oct 25
Nelly Intese Oct 25
Romulos Robinos Nov 11
Ryan Supan Nov 11
Gloria Pabilon Dec 6
Mary Joy Opo Dec 6
Cecilio Maragana Dec 6
Jhonnie Maragana Dec 6
Rahman Camili Dec 18
Cesar Batralo Dec 21
Remedios Detoya Dec22
Gil Jef frey Mondejar Dec22
2007NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Elmo Dolotallas Exechelise Jan 12
Maria Gina Dolotallas Acero Jan 12
Betty Brazuela Jan 19
Florentino Brazuela Galgao Jan 19
Felicidad Katalbas Jan 25
Joseph Meregildo Feb 3
Samuel Clemente Feb 6
Lucio Madagat Feb 18
Leo Velasco Feb 19
Romualdo Balbuena Feb 25
Romy Garma Mar 7
Abner Hizarsa Mar 22
Josephine Nogoy Mar 27
Villanor Adona Mar 27
Maria Luisa Dominado Posa Apr 12
Nilo Arado Apr 12
Jonas Jose Burgos Apr 28
Reggie dela Rosa Apr 28
Noly Labang May
PB7272
2007-2011
Fernando Labang May
Edwin Rodriguez May 24
Dagami Butlig July 5
Narciso Poloy July 5
Antonio Roda Dealagdon Aug 3
Eric Buhain Eloc Aug 3
Julius Sango Aug 3
Manolito Serrano Aug 3
Reynold Cirilio Dec 7
2008NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Flaviano Arante Jan 25
Lodrigo Babatio Mar 3
Willurico Merador June 3
Calixto Alfante June 11
Nonilon Gabani July 27
Florencia Espiritu Aug 21
Nelson Balmania Aug 21
Elias Rodriguez Aug 21
Elmer Dela Cruz Aug 22
2009NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Conrado Jesalva Mar 3
Norato Amualla Sept 15
Ruth Gecaro Mar tino Oct 10
Elino Pangasinan Dec 12
2010NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Eriber to Mendoza Atienza May 20
Agustito Ladera Aug 28
Renato Deliguer Sept 9
Alfredo Bucal Oct 11
Tomas Sayto Liskis Oct 11
2011NAME REpoRtEd dAtE of
AbductioN
Reynold Mar th Esurez Jan 26
Felix Balaston Mar 23
Jully Devero July 7
Gerald Abale July 7
Michael Celeste July 7
Novito Gabriel Nov 11