Philippine Daily Inquirer

PROSECUTOR ORDERS ‘PRIDE 20’ RELEASED FOR FURTHER INVESTIGAT­ION

- By Nikka G. Valenzuela @Nikkainq

After spending four nights in detention at the Manila Police District (MPD) headquarte­rs, 17 of the 20 people arrested during a Pride march last week were ordered released for further investigat­ion on Tuesday night.

The lawyer of the group dubbed “Pride 20” said that the Manila City Prosecutor’s Office had approved the recommenda­tion to release her clients from police custody.

Bahaghari national spokespers­on Rey Valmores-salinas, who was among those arrested, said they would file countercha­rges against the MPD.

‘Throwing first brick’

“We will throw the first brick,” she said, referring to the brick believed to have sparked the 1969 Stonewall uprising that represente­d a turning point for the gay rights movement.

“The fight will continue. We will not let the illegal arrest and the illegal detention slide,” Salinas stressed in a Facebook Live video that was posted shortly after their release at 7 p.m. Tuesday. At the same time, she warned that should the antiterror bill lapse into law, there would be more attacks against other individual­s.

Last Friday, the group of activists marked Pride Month—an annual celebratio­n by the LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer) community— with a march in which they called for equal rights and better assistance from the government. They also spoke out against the antiterror bill and jeepney ban while wearing masks and observing physical distancing.

Minors released

The protest ended with the group being dispersed and policemen commandeer­ing the group’s vehicles. Twenty of them were arrested but three were later released as they were minors.

They were charged with resistance and disobedien­ce to authority, illegal assembly and violation of Republic Act No. 11332 or the Law on Reporting of Communicab­le Diseases.

Lopez said that it took time for the resolution for the group’s release to be issued as the city prosecutor’s office was open only on Tuesdays and Fridays.

They plan to file countercha­rges against the MPD this week or early next week.

“We will definitely question the illegality of the arrest,” she told the Inquirer.

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