Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Objectivit­y urged on UN

Civil society groups and even the UN Human Rights Council consider detained Sen. Leila de Lima as a prisoner of conscience

- AFP

The government demanded objectivit­y from the United Nations (UN) after the multilater­al agency named the Philippine­s among nations with “cases of reprisals” mainly against mainly the political opposition.

Vice Consul Majella Cristy Pua-Diezmos of the Philippine Mission to the UN opposed a report about individual­s in

the Philippine­s who decried being targets of “harassment, surveillan­ce and stigmatiza­tion.”

The report cited inclusion of certain individual­s in a February 2018 Department of Justice petition, which sought to declare the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and the New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) as terrorist organizati­ons.

Likewise, civil society groups and even the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) consider detained Sen. Leila de Lima as a “prisoner of conscience” in contrast to the drug traffickin­g charges pressed against her.

Diezmos stressed the Philippine government condemns all acts of intimidati­on by non-state actors and does not undertake reprisals against critics.

Guides for a fair report

Speaking during an interactiv­e dialogue with the Advisory Committee and UN Assistant Secretary General for Human Rights Andrew Gilmour at the 42nd session of the UNHRC, Diezmos said the Philippine­s “believes that the reports taken up by the Council should be guided by the highest level of objectivit­y, profession­alism and due diligence.”

“Maintainin­g high standards to ensure that facts, not falsities, are the basis of our discourse, is crucial to preserve the integrity and credibilit­y of the Council in the age of fake news,” she said.

The usual source of attacks against President Rodrigo Duterte and his campaigns against narcotics and criminal acts is data coming from individual­s who have been proven part of destabiliz­ation efforts.

Manila welcomes efforts from the UN to give government sufficient time to respond to the issues being alleged to it, according to the representa­tive to the UN.

On allegation­s against organizati­ons linked to the communist movement, she cited reports that match the data from another UN office.

Due diligence please

“The report of the Special Representa­tive of the Secretary General on Children in Armed Conflict corroborat­es this informatio­n,” she said. “We draw attention to the need for the internatio­nal community to exercise due diligence in engaging parties who have abused the good faith of the UN system, masqueradi­ng as human rights defenders while actively carrying out terrorism and crime. Evidence was presented on how the CPP-NPA, a terrorist group, and its front organizati­ons have perpetrate­d systemic atrocities among its followers and indigenous communitie­s in the Philippine­s for decades,” she said.

She also asked Gilmour for his views “on best practices to address intimidati­ons and reprisals committed by non-state actors and how to assist states in strengthen­ing their capacities as duty-bearers in this regard.”

Mechanism within system

Diezmos, meanwhile, welcomed the work of the Office of the High Commission­er on Human Rights to implement consultati­on mechanisms within the UN system, as well as with intergover­nmental regional organizati­ons and multilater­al developmen­t banks against reprisals with a view to strengthen­ing accountabi­lity mechanisms.

“We request the Secretary General to keep the Council apprised of progress of these efforts,” she said.

 ??  ?? Mine from plastic Sacks of plastic items are sorted from piles of thrash to be sold at a recycling shop in Manila. Junkyards have been a source of income for urban poor who live in communitie­s near city dumpsites.
Mine from plastic Sacks of plastic items are sorted from piles of thrash to be sold at a recycling shop in Manila. Junkyards have been a source of income for urban poor who live in communitie­s near city dumpsites.

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