Business World

Comelec threat of arrest is illegal, lawmakers say

- Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

LAWMAKERS at the weekend slammed an election official’s threat to have people who criticize the Commission on Elections for bias arrested by the military.

Detained Senator Leila M. de Lima, a former human rights commission­er, said Election Commission­er Rey E. Bulay’s threat “is uncalled for and illegal.”

“Under the constituti­on, the only time the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) is allowed to exercise the law enforcemen­t powers of the Philippine National Police, like arresting people, is when the commander-in-chief calls out the AFP to suppress lawless violence,” she said in a statement.

“Neither Bulay nor the Comelec is the commander-in-chief,” Ms. De Lima, one of President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s most outspoken critics, said. “Not even during elections. The Comelec’s deputizati­on power during elections certainly does not include the power to use the AFP in stifling criticisms and suppressin­g free speech.”

“We will not hesitate to call upon the AFP, which is now under Comelec control, to round you up and have you jailed,” Mr. Bulay told a news briefing in mixed English and Filipino on Friday.

“There is no basis for such a threat,” Antonio M. La Viña, a constituti­onal law professor at the Ateneo de Manila University, said in a mobile phone message.

“You can only be arrested if you commit a crime. It is definitely not a crime to criticize the Comelec. Any statements about the elections are also protected speech.”

Ms. de Lima said these people merely exercised their right to freedom of speech and to petition the government for redress.

House Assistant Minority Leader and Party-list Rep. France L. Castro in a separate statement called Comelec hypersensi­tive.

“Citizens either by themselves or through their organizati­ons are completely within their rights to appeal or call for the holding of orderly, peaceful and credible elections,” he said. “That’s just the Filipinos’ way of telling the poll body ‘Hey, Comelec, do your job.’”

“After all, the holding of orderly, peaceful and credible elections is the Comelec’s job under the Constituti­on,” he added, noting that calls for the election body not to favor certain candidates neither sow distrust nor condition the minds of the public.

Mr. Castro asked the Comelec en banc to withdraw its statement.

Mr. Bulay’s warning “is a prior restraint on free speech and expression, which includes political speech, and constricts the already shrinking democratic space in the country,” he added.

Election Commission­er Socorro B. Inting earlier said the call by the group AIM Alumni for Leni for honest, orderly and peaceful elections was unnecessar­y.

The group addressed its call to Comelec, the electoral boards that will manage the elections in voting precincts, Department of Education, police, military and all deputized agencies.

“We, the representa­tives of the Asian Institute of Management (AIM) Alumni for Leni, ask all charged with administer­ing the elections to be nonpartisa­n,” it said. “You are tasked to make voting safe, to ensure that voting is secret, and to protect the will of the voters as expressed in the ballot.”

“Our collective interest is for our candidates to be elected through a credible process. When elections are credible, the results will be accepted, and the transition to the new government will be peaceful and orderly,” they added. —

 ?? THE PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN ?? ELECTION officials sent off a truck containing vote counting machines and other election materials on April 2.
THE PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN ELECTION officials sent off a truck containing vote counting machines and other election materials on April 2.

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