By RONALYN V. OLEA
Bulatlat.com
MANILA – Cesar Garganta, 28, merely wanted to earn extra income for 
the enrolment of his two children. Instead of money, what Garganta got 
was pain and trauma.
On May 28, Garganta and his two friends went to work on a farm in 
Vista Hermosa village, Macalelon, Quezon. At around 9 a.m., the three 
chanced upon more than a dozen men in uniform armed with high-powered 
rifles. The soldiers shouted at the three farmers and Garganta’s two 
companions immediately ran away, leaving Garganta behind.
“For five hours, the soldiers beat me up. They pointed their guns at 
me, pointed a bolo knife on my neck. They squeezed my nose with pliers, 
pricked my ears with sticks. They blindfolded me and tied me to a tree,”
 Garganta said in an interview with 
Bulatlat.com. The soldiers 
belonging to the Philippine Army’s 85th Infantry Battalion were 
insisting that he and his fellow farmers were members of the New 
People’s Army (NPA).
Garganta is only one of the 128 victims of harassment, torture and 
other forms of human rights violations perpetrated by suspected state 
agents in Quezon, according to human rights alliance Karapatan-Southern 
Tagalog (Karapatan-ST). Eight battalions of the Armed Forces of the 
Philippines, police and paramilitary are deployed in the 22 towns of the
 province.
 Farmer
 Cesar Garganta recalls how the soldiers subjected him to physical and 
psychological torture in a press conference, June 25. (Photo by Ronalyn V. Olea / bulatlat.com)
Farmer
 Cesar Garganta recalls how the soldiers subjected him to physical and 
psychological torture in a press conference, June 25. (Photo by Ronalyn V. Olea / bulatlat.com)   
In another town, Eduardo Dela Peña, 37, also suffered harassment from the military. 
On June 22, at around 3 p.m., Dela Peña was tending to his farm at 
sitio Sabang, barangay (village) Pagsangahan, San Francisco, Quezon when
 nine soldiers of the 59th and 74th IB of the Philippine Army approached
 him.
Speaking during the kick-off activity of the mercy mission led by the 
Save Bondoc Peninsula Movement,
 June 25, Dela Peña said soldiers accused him of being an NPA member. 
“They asked me names I do not know. Whenever I said I did not know the 
persons they were asking about, they punched my stomach,” he said in the
 vernacular.
The soldiers went with Dela Peña to his house. “I heard the commander
 ordering his men to kill me. Not long, a soldier pointed a 45 caliber 
gun at me,” he said..... 
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Source:  Bulatlat.com
URL: 
http://bulatlat.com/main/2012/06/25/military-ops-terrorize-farmers-in-south-quezon/