Accused Philippine Lawmakers Find Refuge in Their
Workplace
Five vocal critics of the president have been holed up
in Congress, hoping to avoid arrest.
By Richard C. Paddock, Times Staff Writer
March 16, 2006


MANILA — For nearly three weeks, five members of
Congress have taken sanctuary in their office
building. By day, they attend official meetings. At
night, they sleep in the same room and worry that they
could be arrested at any time.

The left-wing members of the House of Representatives
are vocal critics of President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo, who ordered their arrest last month for
allegedly participating in a plot to force her from
office. They have called on her to resign but deny
trying to oust her.

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 Granted temporary immunity in the congressional
office compound, they spend each night in a large
conference room next door to the office of the speaker
of the House. Security guards stand watch outside
their door to protect them from a possible predawn
police raid.

Rep. Liza Maza, the only woman in the group, gets the
couch. The others sleep on mattresses on the floor.
Late at night and early in the morning, they pad
through the corridors of Congress wearing their
sleeping attire and carrying their pillows. They wash
their clothes in a bathroom sink and hang them at
night outside their offices.

"It's a crazy thing," said Rep. Joel Virador, one of
the five, as he got ready for bed Tuesday night. "But
they have the guns. We are not taking the risk."

The standoff between Arroyo and the left-wing caucus
began with the president's declaration of a state of
emergency Feb. 24. Officials said she was the target
of a coup plot in which she and other top political
figures were to be assassinated.

The five legislators — and a sixth who was arrested
before he could reach the safety of the building — are
at the heart of her contention that the alleged plot
was a conspiracy between left-wing rebels and military
officers.

Arroyo lifted the state of emergency after a week,
saying the threat had subsided, but the government
maintains that it can still arrest suspected plotters
without a warrant. Some military officers have been
relieved of their posts and confined to quarters, but
only one person is behind bars for involvement in the
alleged plot. He is Rep. Crispin Beltran, 73, who has
diabetes and has suffered a minor stroke.

Beltran was arrested Feb. 25 on a 21-year-old warrant
for sedition dating back to when Ferdinand Marcos was
president. He is now charged with rebellion against
Arroyo, a capital offense.

The other five learned of Beltran's arrest while they
were at a hotel holding a news conference to criticize
Arroyo's declaration of an emergency. As police moved
in, Rep. Satur Ocampo, their leader, escaped out a
side door. Officers stopped his official vehicle and
arrested two aides, but Ocampo, 67, jumped into a
backup car and escaped.

Soon after, the other four members of Congress slipped
out the back of the hotel. Two days later, all five
made their way to the legislative building, known as
the Batasan, where the House voted unanimously to give
them protection until the congressional session ends
or warrants are issued for their arrest.

Police say that if the Batasan Five, as they have
become known, step outside the compound, they will be
arrested.

With Congress insisting that legal procedures be
followed, police have struggled to come up with
sufficient evidence to obtain arrest warrants from a
judge. Nevertheless, Arroyo pronounced all six guilty
in an interview Saturday with the Philippine Star
newspaper

"They have committed a crime," the president said.
"They are committing a continuing crime. And we have
laws to deal with that. In fact, they are disrupting
the work of Congress with what they are doing."

Arroyo said arrest warrants were unnecessary but that
as a concession to Congress, her administration had
agreed not to arrest the five without them.

"The secretary of justice has agreed that he will go
to the trouble of getting a warrant," she said. "But
they really have to face the full force of the law."

Arroyo has maintained a tenuous hold on the presidency
since her staff last year accidentally released a tape
recording of her directing a top election official to
make sure she won the 2004 presidential race by a
million votes. She survived impeachment attempts in
Congress, where her supporters control most of the
votes, and she has rejected calls to resign.

The accused lawmakers deny they were plotting to
overthrow Arroyo and say she is trying to silence them
because they are among her most vocal critics.

The six make up the House's entire left-wing caucus.
Ocampo, a journalist, was once a top official of the
outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines. He spent
12 years in prison without being convicted of a crime,
escaped on one occasion, and spent another 10 years in
on-and-off hiding with rebel forces in the mountains.

"I have escaped from better presidents than her," he
said after evading arrest two weeks ago.

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