Young journalist and human rights activist murdered by the army in Mindanao

RSF expressed indignation today at the murder of a young Filipino journalist and human rights activist, Benjaline "Beng" Hernandez, on the island of Mindanao.

  Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontières - RSF) expressed indignation today at the murder of a young Filipino journalist and human rights activist, Benjaline "Beng" Hernandez, on the island of Mindanao and called on the Philippine government to "end the abuses and violence of the security forces committed against civilians in the course of anti-terrorist operations." RSF secretary-general Robert Ménard said in a letter to Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo that the killing showed that Mindanao "remains one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists and defenders of human rights."  He called on her to launch a "serious and thorough investigation" of the murder and to find and punish those responsible. RSF learns that Hernandez, who worked for university student publications and was a researcher with the Karapatan human rights organisation in Davao (Mindanao island), was killed on 5 April while investigating how the peace process was being implemented in the Arakan Valley, in Cotabato province.  The journalist, aged 22, was reportedly shot dead along with three local young people by soldiers of the Philippine army's 12th Special Forces Company and the 7th Airborne Battalion led by Sgt Antonio Torella. The official autopsy showed that Hernandez and the other three (Crisanto Amora, Vivian Andrade and Labaon Sinunday) were killed at close range. Hernandez had bullets in the head, neck, chest and hand.  The army said the four were caught in crossfire between troops and rebels, but friends of Hernandez said she was wounded and then executed by the soldiers. The secretary-general of Karapatan in Davao, Joel Virador, told RSF that his organisation would send a fact-finding team to the scene.  The local branch of the Human Rights Commission said it would also investigate. The Cotabato provincial prosecutor will make an official enquiry. Hernandez, who ran the student paper Atenews at Ateneo University in Davao, had recently joined Karapatan. She continued writing for university publications in the region and was vice-president for Mindanao of the College Editors' Guild of the Philippines.  She is due to be buried in Davao on 13 April. Karapatan said three of its employees had been killed since President Macapagal-Arroyo took office in January 2001. In all, 28 members of human rights and civil society groups have been killed during the same period. Between November 2000 and May 2001, three journalists were killed on Mindanao.  Candelario "Jun" Cayona, a presenter on the radio station dxLL, was murdered after getting anonymous death threats from people who objected to his regular interviews with leaders of the Abu Sayyaf guerrilla movement.
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Updated on 20.01.2016