Business World

Analysts say civic groups must make gov’t accountabl­e

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter

CIVIL society groups will play a key role in seeking accountabi­lity in the government’s pandemic response before President Rodrigo R. Duterte steps down in 2022, political analysts said on Sunday.

Nonstate actors and institutio­ns must evaluate the government’s pandemic efforts, Human Rights and Peoples Empowermen­t Center Executive Director Bryan E. Gonzales said in a Facebook messenger chat.

“Our social and political movements achieve more victories when they work together,” he said.

Out of all Southeast Asian countries, Filipinos were most disapprovi­ng of their government’s response to the pandemic, according to a study by the ASEAN Studies Centre.

Based on the survey that involved 1,032 people living in Southeast Asia, 53.7% of Filipino respondent­s thumbed down the government’s handling of the health crisis, making them the most dissatisfi­ed.

Several countries including the Philippine­s have used the pandemic to harass journalist­s, activists, health workers and “anyone else who dares to criticize the official response to the coronaviru­s,” according to Human Rights Watch.

More than 120,000 violators of quarantine protocols had been arrested in the Philippine­s since Mr. Duterte locked down the entire Luzon island in mid-March last year.

They included aid distributo­rs, jeepney drivers, rallyists and others critical of the government’s slow delivery of social services during the pandemic, United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said last year.

In mid-2020, the tough-talking leader railed against medical workers for criticizin­g his government’s pandemic response, daring them to stage a revolution.

“The mere fact that the government has taken advantage of the current health crisis to quell critics is proof that dissent among sectors most affected by the ongoing pandemic and recession has become too loud to ignore,” Mr. Gonzales said.

“Our civil society did not take these issues sitting down,” he added.

Mr. Duterte in August placed the capital region under stricter quarantine status after 80 local groups representi­ng 80,000 doctors called for tighter health protocols.

Mr. Gonzales said it would be “pointless to concentrat­e on coalition-building efforts on the major political blocs of the opposition.”

“We’ve seen dozens of coalitions emerge across the years but hostilitie­s among conflictin­g political blocs have created cleavages in these alliances,” he said. He cited the need to focus on homeowners’ associatio­ns, transport and other sectoral groups.

“Let’s look at the unaffiliat­ed groups and associatio­ns in our communitie­s,” Mr. Gonzales said. “Let’s look at the younger generation­s. If we can build a broad coalition with these people and create with them a new message and a new politics of change, the warring groups in the opposition will have no choice but to tag along.”

He said the 2022 elections would become a referendum on the work of social and political movements.

“It does not help that the political class always sees civil society organizati­ons as critics and adversarie­s,” Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a research fellow at the Ateneo de Manila University Policy Center said in a Facebook messenger chat.

“This administra­tion in particular has always been suspicious of civil society organizati­ons,” he said. “The latter’s reputation as government watchdogs has made some politician­s wary of dealing with them on a profession­al level, specifical­ly in terms of exacting or ensuring accountabi­lity.”

The Duterte administra­tion has tagged humanitari­an organizati­ons and workers as communist fronts.

Citing Congress’ oversight function under the 1987 Constituti­on, Mr. Yusingco said legislator­s must “put more effort in exacting accountabi­lity.”

“This is their constituti­onal duty after all,” he said. “If lawmakers fail in doing this job, then voters must make them pay in 2022. Citizens must not relent in making sure our lawmakers fulfill this constituti­onal mandate.”

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