FIRST PERSON ACCOUNT: I am Jerome Succor
Aba. I am a Muslim human rights worker from Mindanao, NOT a terrorist.
By
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April 25, 2018 2:34 pm
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MANILA
(MindaNews / 25 April) — Asalaamu
Alaykum. Peace be upon you. I thank Allah SWT, the
Almighty for giving me the strength and courage to survive the grueling 28
hours of torture. Alhamdullilah! Allahu Akbar! Allahu Akbar! Allahu Akbar! I
send my deep gratitude for the untiring protest actions mounted by friends and
organizations from all over the USA- from Portland to New York City. Your quick
response to my situation, such as the rally at San Francisco Airport and call
barrage, has helped tremendously in my release from the cruel clutches of the
CBP and Homeland Security. I also send my highest regards to colleagues
who rushed to my aid upon my return to Manila.
I
(went) to the US for a speaking tour on the human rights situation of our Moro
brothers and sisters in the Philippines upon invitation by local US churches.
The US Embassy in the Philippines granted me a 10-year multiple entry visa,
certifying that my entry to the US is legal and sanctioned by the authorities.
Never
did I imagine that this trip would end with my torture, detention and
deportation.
Jerome Aladdin Succor
Aba, national chair of Suara Bangsamoro
(Voice of the Moro) arrived at the San Francisco airport on 17 April 2018
carrying a 10-year multiple entry US Visa that the US Embassy in Manila granted
on 27 March 2018, supposedly valid until 20 March 2028. Aba was barred entry
and deported after a 28-hour interrogation. Photo courtesy of Jerome Aba
I
suffered heartless and dehumanizing abuses from interrogators of the Custom and
Border Protection and the US Homeland Security. They detained me for 28 hours,
hurled malicious accusations at me, deprived me of access to a lawyer and
contact with family and friends.
The
horror did not end there. They ordered me to strip naked with an industrial fan
blasting at me. They deprived me of food for hours and later served me pork
despite knowing that it is an affront to my religion. They threatened to kill
me. Twice, they left me alone in a room with a gun and a grenade. They made me
sign blank papers denying the torture happened.
I
invoked my human rights many times but they refused to acknowledge them,
saying, “You have no rights. You are not entitled to a lawyer. We are the law
here.”
That
twenty-eight-hour ordeal continues to send me chills even now in Manila. Just
this morning, I woke up gasping for air as I was haunted by vivid images of my
interrogators in my dreams.
I did
not deserve that kind of treatment. No one does.
I
believe my involvement in human rights work in the Philippines is the main
reason I was deported. With Trump’s administration thriving in misinformation
and falsehood, there is no place for me shedding light on the US’ hand in the
destruction of Marawi and the ongoing “war on terror”
against my Moro and Lumad brothers in Mindanao. This
US “war on terror” led to the killings of civilians, forced evacuation due to
aerial bombings in communities, and has reinforced Islamophobia.
This is
the truth the US government wants to hide from the American people and the
whole world.
This
concealment and twisting of the truth is something we are familiar with as
Filipinos. Here in our country, the human rights crisis is brashly dismissed by
the government. Our own president attacks human rights defenders, shamelessly
accusing them of supporting drug lords or labeling them as terrorists.
Jerome Aladdin Succor
Aba, chair of the Suara Bangsamoro
(Voice of the Moro People) and co-chair of Sandugo,
narrates in a press conference on April 21, 2018 what happened to him at the
San Francisco airport during his 28-hour interrogation. Aba was barred entry
into the US when he arrived at the San Francisco airport on April 17 and was
sent home aftre a 28-hour interrogation. Photo
courtesy of Arkibong Bayan
But the
truth must and will be known. Duterte’s martial law
in Mindanao resulted in the extra-judicial killings of 130 Moro, Lumad, and peasants. The military airstrike in the Islamic
City of Marawi left 1,000 Maranao-Muslims
dead while continuing airstrikes on the whole island have driven 500,000 Moros,
Lumad and peasants out of their villages for safety.
Ridiculous trumped-up charges have also been filed against 406 peasants and Lumad.
These
brazen attacks against the people and their rights were executed to protect the
interests of big US corporations. The Duterte
government has opened vast lands of Mindanao, including the territories of the Bangsamoro and ancestral domains of the indigenous people,
to exploitation and plunder by companies such as Dole, Unifruitti,
and Del Monte.
Now,
about a million hectares are encroached upon and operated by mining businesses
and 500,000 hectares by plantations. On top of this, a million hectares are
reserved for the expansion of oil palm plantations by 2020.
We will
not sit on the sidelines and witness our people suffer from worsening
environmental destruction, displacement, and poverty. Neither will we be silenced
when we are attacked and abused.
And so
I say:
I am
Jerome Succor Aba. I am a Muslim human rights worker from Mindanao, NOT a
terrorist.
US
BORDER OFFICIALS TORTURED ME. They violated my basic human rights recognized
and protected by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
I
demand justice!
Justice
for Marawi Victims!
End
Martial Law in Mindanao!
Stop
U.S “War on Terror”!
STOP
ISLAMOPHOBIA!
Muslim
Not Terrorist!
U.S
IMPERIALIST, NO.1 TERRORIST!
[Jerome
Aladdin Succor Aba, 25, national chair of Suara Bangsamoro (Voice of the Moro People) and co-chair of Sandugo Movement of Moro and Indigenous Peoples for Self-Determination,flew to the United States on April 17, 2018
for a speaking tour on invitation of US church groups. He was deported after a
28-hour interrogation at the San Francisco airport. He recounted in a press
conference in Manila on April 21 the psychological and physical torture that he
suffered there]