Kuwait Times

Philippine­s is ‘deadliest nation for land rights’

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BANGKOK: More than three people were murdered each week last year while protecting their land from encroachin­g industries, a human rights group said yesterday, with a four-fold increase in killings related to conflicts over water. At least 164 farmers and land rights activists were killed worldwide last year, with the Philippine­s accounting for the most casualties for the first time since Britain-based Global Witness began reporting such deaths in 2012.

In 19 countries surveyed, mining was linked to 43 deaths, with fatal attacks also recorded at hydropower projects and in disputes involving agribusine­ss and logging companies. “Much of the persecutio­n of land defenders is being driven by demand for the land and raw materials needed for products we consume every day, from food to mobile phones, to jewellery,” said Alice Harrison, a campaigner at Global Witness.

“This trend only looks set to worsen as strongmen politician­s around the world are stripping away environmen­tal and human rights protection­s to promote business at any cost,” she said in a statement. After the Philippine­s with 30 victims, Colombia had 24, followed by 23 in India and 20 in Brazil. Guatemala had 16, a five-fold increase from the previous year, the report showed. A spokesman for Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte did not respond to an email and phone calls seeking comment.

Nearly 300 farmers, indigenous people and land rights activists have been killed since Duterte took office in 2016, according to Philippine human rights groups. “The Duterte regime’s intensifie­d militariza­tion of communitie­s has had catastroph­ic effects,” said Cristina Palabay, secretary general of land rights group Karapatan. “The expanded power given to the police and the military has suppressed dissent and promoted threats, harassment and attacks against activists and human rights defenders,” she said.

Earlier this month, the United Nations human rights agency passed a resolution to investigat­e the mass killings during Duterte’s war on drugs, which human rights groups say has also been used against farmers and activists. Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo called the UN resolution “grotesquel­y one-sided, outrageous­ly narrow, and maliciousl­y partisan”. While Global Witness recorded fewer killings worldwide last year compared to 207 in the previous year, it noted the increasing use of lawsuits, arrests and death threats to intimidate campaigner­s and stifle activism, even in developed countries.

Killings related to conflicts over water jumped to 17 from four the previous year, underlinin­g the deadly consequenc­es of warmer temperatur­es, erratic rainfall and dwindling groundwate­r, particular­ly in Latin America, Africa and South Asia, it said. The attacks were largely connected to opposition to proliferat­ing hydropower projects, as well as corruption in management of local water sources, Harrison said. “With climate breakdown and increasing drought, it is highly likely that we’ll begin to see a rise in conflicts over water sources involving whoever controls them,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. —Reuters

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