Panay News

UN Special Rapporteur­s raise concerns on rights violations committed in PH

- Erythrina Bldg., Maaralin corner Matatag Sts., Central District, Diliman, Quezon City UN/15

HU MAN rights alliance KARAPATAN welcomes the public issuance by six United Nations special rapporteur­s led by United Nations ( UN) Special Rapporteur on Human Rights while Countering Terrorism Fionnuala Ni Aoilain of their communicat­ions sent on Oct. 23, 2023 to the Marcos Jr. government calling attention to human rights violations committed in the course of implementi­ng the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020, the Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppressio­n Act of 2012 and Executive Order 68 of 2018 (or the adoption of the National Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism Strategy and Creation of the National AML/CFT Coordinati­ng Committee).

The UN special rapporteur­s had previously requested the Marcos Jr. regime to respond to their concerns within 60 days. Failing this, the rapporteur­s said that they would publish their letter through their communicat­ions reporting website.

The letter, which was made public this January 2024, points to the Marcos Jr. regime’s utter lack of interest in addressing the grave human rights issues cited by the rapporteur­s. The letter was also signed by the UN special rapporteur­s on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression; the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of associatio­n; the situation of human rights defenders; the rights of indigenous peoples; and on freedom of religion or belief.

The rapporteur­s raised serious concern over reports that up to 24 individual­s have been victimized and “multiple religious organizati­ons and their members, as well as other direct service non-profit organizati­ons have been affected by the alleged measures, in turn hindering access to Indigenous Peoples, internally displaced persons, human rights defenders, and women and children, to critical human rights and humanitari­an services.”

They pointed out concerns on the designatio­n of certain non-State armed groups in noninterna­tional armed conflicts (such as the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and the New People’s Army) as terrorists and linking the provision of humanitari­an activities -- protection and assistance -- as a form of support for terrorism or to persons or entities designated as terrorists, saying this “result[s] in the lowering of fundamenta­l human rights and humanitari­an protection­s for the weakest and most vulnerable.”

The l etter cited t hat on at least four occasions, the UN special rapporteur­s had already communicat­ed their concern to the Philippine government over several human rights violations committed in the context of counter-terrorism such as arbitrary arrests, enforced disappeara­nces, killings, fabricated charges and judicial harassment.

They further cited that in April 2020, they voiced their concern over the designatio­n of individual­s and civil society and humanitari­an organizati­ons as “terrorists” pursuant to the Anti-Terrorism Act, stating that this comprised discrimina­tion directed at religious and other minorities.

Moreover, concerns over allegation­s of judicial harassment and red- tagging of seven human rights defenders and Indigenous leaders of the Cordillera Peoples Alliance ( CPA) were similarly directed to the Marcos Jr. government in a letter in January 2023.

The escalating human rights v i o l a t i o n s d o c u m e n t e d b y Karapatan, including the filing of terrorism financing charges against yet another developmen­t NGO, the Cebu-based CERNET, is a clear indicator that the Marcos Jr. regime is all talk and bluster in its claims of adhering to internatio­nal human rights norms and covenants to which the Philippine government is a signatory. – KARAPATAN,

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