Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

IPs getting more marginaliz­ed

- By PJ Orias

Human rights organizati­on Amnesty Internatio­nal yesterday blasted the government’s plan to open ancestral lands in Mindanao to investors.

Speaking to reporters here yesterday, Jose Noel Olano, director of Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Philippine­s section, said President Rodrigo Duterte seems to have the same rhetoric for all disadvanta­ged and marginaliz­ed sector-- that they should adjust to their circumstan­ces.

“Duterte speaks as if his hands are tied and expects people to just bend over backwards for policies that are counter-progressiv­e to human rights. His actions and words normalize discrimina­tion against minorities and the marginaliz­ed groups,” Olano said.

Olano said Duterte’s administra­tion has rolled back hard-won human rights guarantees that activists fought for in the past.

With these policies, Olano said the president should expect more protests and mass resistance as his threats gave fresh oxygen to the spirit of resistance.

The human rights group, however, said the shrinking civic space for public participat­ion in the country is making it more dangerous to speak out against the government and engage in protests.

President Duterte’s cavalier attitude to basic human rights also encourages a climate of fear among human rights defenders, the rights group adds.

Olano said the growing inequality is creating a climate for social division to thrive and thus leads to more human rights violations.

Duterte, which the Amnesty identified as one of the worst world leaders, said attacks on journalist­s and human rights defenders, particular­ly those critical of the government, has increased in 2017.

“Duterte’s witch hunt is relentless, a number of individual­s continue to face threats and intimidati­on,” he said.

The Amnesty Internatio­nal was in Cagayan de Oro to bring its global human rights report for 2017 and 2018 to Mindanao.

One of the highlights of its annual report on the State of the World’s Human Rights was the widespread killings of thousands of alleged drug offenders, which it says, appeared to be systematic, planned, organized and encouraged by the authoritie­s.

The report emphasized that since the drug war started, there has been no meaningful investigat­ions into the killings, and that no police officers were known to have been held to account.

Amnesty’s annual report was launched in Manila last February 22, in Cagayan de Oro yesterday, and will be also be launched in Baguio this March 23.

The group’s State of the World’s Human Rights covers a total of 159 countries and gives the public a comprehens­ive analysis of the state of human rights in the world today.

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