European lawmakers denied visit to De Lima
MANILA — Members of an international lawmakers group yesterday hit the "non-action" of the Philippine National Police on their request to visit detained Senator Leila De Lima.
Enrique Guerrero Salom, Norbert Hans Neuser, Paolo Alberti–members of the European parliament–were prevented from visiting the detained senator at her detention cell at the police headquarters in Quezon City.
Salom, the president of Progressive Alliance of Socialists of Democrats in the European Parliament, said they are "disappointed" with their foiled visit to De Lima, an outspoken critic of President Rodrigo Duterte.
"We are very concerned with the situation of Sen. De Lima," he said, adding that they fully respect the legal processes in the country. He reiterated the European parliament's earlier request that De Lima be allowed to "play her role as a senator."
Members of the Geneva-based Inter-Parliamentary Union in a report dated October 18 also called on the "relevant authorities to release [De Lima] immediately and to seriously consider abandoning the legal proceedings should serious evidence not rapidly be forthcoming."
It added that its mission report "shows that the steps taken against [De Lima] came in response to her vocal opposition to President Duterte's war on drugs, including her denunciation of her alleged responsibility for the extrajudicial killings, and that there is no evidence to justify criminal cases against her."
Alex Padilla, one of the senator's counsels, this is the third time the members of the EU parliament were denied a visit. It was supposedly scheduled at 9 to 10 a.m. "They (PNP) refused to act on the application, submitted as early as October 26," Padilla said. —