Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Marcos forms human rights ‘super body’

The organizati­on is in charge of upholding the UNJP’s human rights initiative­s in the fields of criminal justice, law enforcemen­t and policy-making

- BY TIZIANA CELINE PIATOS @tribunephl_tiz

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has establishe­d the Special Committee on Human Rights Coordinati­on to “further champion human rights protection” in the country, Malacañang said.

In Administra­tive Order 22 issued on 8 May, but which Malacañang only made public on Sunday, Marcos establishe­d the “super body” whose mission is to “enhance the mechanisms for the promotion and protection of human rights in the Philippine­s.”

The organizati­on, which reports to the Presidenti­al Human Rights Committee, is in charge of upholding the UNJP’s human rights initiative­s in the fields of criminal justice, law enforcemen­t, and policy-making.

To carry out the October 2020 UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution on capacity-building and technical cooperatio­n for the promotion and protection of human rights in the Philippine­s, the three-year UNJP was created.

“It is imperative to sustain and enhance the accomplish­ments under the UNJP, which is set to expire on 31 July 2024, through institutio­nalization of a robust multi-stakeholde­r process for the promotion and protection of human rights in the Philippine­s,” Marcos said.

The chiefs of the department­s of foreign affairs, interior, and local government make up the committee, which is chaired by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin and co-chaired by Justice Secretary Crispin Remulla.

Strengthen­ing human rights investigat­ion and accountabi­lity, collecting informatio­n on purported human rights breaches by law enforcemen­t, civic space and private sector engagement, national mechanisms for implementa­tion, reporting, and follow-up, and human rights-based approaches to drug control and counterter­rorism are among the tasks assigned to the special body.

The committee is also mandated to support and streamline the work being done by relevant government agencies and make it easier for victims of human rights violations to access avenues for redress.

Additional­ly, it aims to guarantee that laws and programs protecting the human rights of people detained are implemente­d effectivel­y. This includes making sure that no one is tortured or subjected to any cruel, or inhumane treatment or punishment.

The special committee’s member agencies’ present budgetary allotments will provide the funding needed for the order’s initial execution.

Marcos’ strategy differs significan­tly from that of his predecesso­r, Rodrigo Duterte, whose administra­tion, according to United Nations experts in an official communicat­ion to the Philippine government in December 2019, “spawned a broader trend of so-called ‘red-tagging’ of human rights defenders, journalist­s, rural communitie­s and legitimate organizati­ons, perceived as threats or enemies of the State.”

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