Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOJ BACKS ENACTMENT OF LAW CRIMINALIZ­ING RED-TAGGING

- By Marlon Ramos @MRamosINQ

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra on Tuesday supported moves by some lawmakers to push for the passage of a law that would declare Red-tagging as a criminal offense.

“[Criminaliz­ing Red-tagging] may help reduce the problem of reckless endangerme­nt [of state forces]. It’s really something for Congress to ponder on,” Guevarra told the Inquirer.

“It would be best … that Congress enact a law clearly defining and expressly penalizing what is loosely called today as ‘Red-tagging,’” he added.

Under the present laws, the justice secretary said individual­s who have been Redtagged, or accused of being members of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s without legal basis, may only lodge cases for harassment, defamation, coercion, unjust vexation and violation privacy laws against those making the allegation­s.

“If Congress is minded to criminaliz­e Red-tagging, it should enact the appropriat­e legislatio­n,” he stressed.

Last month, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon filed Senate Bill No. 2121, or the Act Defining and Penalizing Red-Tagging, to “fix the legal gaps, address impunity [and)] institutio­nalize a system of accountabi­lity.”

Drilon’s proposed legislatio­n defined Red-tagging as the act of “labeling, vilifying, branding, naming, accusing, harassing, persecutin­g, stereotypi­ng, or caricaturi­ng individual­s, groups, or organizati­ons as state enemies, left-leaning, subversive­s, communists or terrorists.”

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