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Watch elections for rights violations, global media told

- John Victor D. Ordoñez

A GLOBAL human rights watchdog has called on internatio­nal media to monitor the Philippine elections on May 9.

“We urge the internatio­nal community, including global media outlets, to monitor these closely, to recognize the Filipino people’s effort to assert their civil and political rights in this election period,” the Internatio­nal Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippine­s said in a statement on Sunday.

They cited the need to ensure that the crimes committed under the dictatorsh­ip of the late Ferdinand E. Marcos are not repeated.

In February, the group started the Internatio­nal Observer Mission, a campaign that seeks to record instances of election-related violence, red-tagging and vote-buying during the election period.

The watchdog also started a campaign to sanction human rights violators in the country, specifical­ly the so-called architects of President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s war on drugs.

“Even the possibilit­y of a return of the Marcos family to power exposes the negligence of national and internatio­nal institutio­ns to hold accountabl­e perpetrato­rs of crimes against humanity, and by extension their complicity in the human rights crisis in the Philippine­s,” Peter Murphy, the group’s Global and Council head, said in the statement.

“After these elections, all democratic government­s and organizati­ons including the labor movement and faith communitie­s need to radically increase their support for Filipino democracy and the Filipino people who passionate­ly want to restore it,” he added.

The group earlier said the Internatio­nal Observer Mission (IOM) would provide independen­t monitoring of the May 9 elections to inform the internatio­nal community about the election situation in the country.

The monitoring started in February and will end once elected candidates are confirmed by June. —

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