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Through tedious and detailed research and analysis from interviews with key
informants, Fowler exposes how governments hide the truth about the war on terror
through arguments defending “national security.”
This cloak of national security has been used to cover up strategies to hide the truth
from the public. Fowler decries that mass surveillance and antiterror laws, no matter
how draconian, are of “questionable value in defeating terrorism.”
During the martial law years under Ferdinand Marcos, it was not only journalists who
were “shot” at as bearers of the truth; mass media entities that did not toe the martial
law line of praising the “New Society” of the dictator and his family were
also closed down.
Last Sept. 14, a firefight took place in Patikul, Sulu, between the military and alleged
members of the Abu Sayyaf. After the smoke cleared, the bodies of seven young
Tausug men, ages ranging from 16 to 30, were found.
Government military sources reported that these young men were Abu Sayyaf
members, and pointed to the firearms near their corpses as evidence.
A veteran Inquirer reporter based in Zamboanga City, Julie S. Alipala, wrote a news
report disputing the military claims. She interviewed relatives of the slain youth who
repeatedly asserted that their dead were merely picking fruits for them to sell later.
After reportedly getting verbal approval from a military officer in the area, the men
proceeded with their fruit picking. At about the same time, the military was engaged in
a fierce firefight with some elements of the Abu Sayyaf, but the latter managed to flee.
Civil society members engaged in peace monitoring in the area corroborated Julie’s
report, saying that the military turned to the hapless fruit pickers in order to show the
military’s success in killing local members of the Abu Sayyaf.
Shortly after Julie’s report was published, a spate of hate messages were posted on her
social media wall, complete with her picture captioned “bayarang kulumnista (sic) ng
Abu Sayyaf: huwag tularan!”
One message threatened to cut her head off, and to make her a “tokhang” victim, to add
her to the growing number of extrajudicial killings in the name of President Duterte’s
war on drugs.
Many of Julie’s supporters believe that these messages are part of the concerted efforts
of the government’s troll factory, unleashing vociferous comments against perceived
critics of the government.
Julie Alipala is being shot at for hearing the side of the otherwise voiceless but reliable
sources of information; she is perceived as “siding with the enemy of the state” and
ergo, endangering “national security.”
But what does “national security” mean? Whose nation and whose security? Is it the
nation of sycophants and the security of the already secured buffoons in the
government?