Panay News

Group asks SC to outlaw mandatory vaccinatio­ns

- (Dexter Cabalza Philippine Daily Inquirer 2022)

MANILA – A group of concerned citizens asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to declare null and void for being unconstitu­tional several of the government’s COVID-19 related policies, including a resolution issued by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) on mandatory vaccinatio­n.

Named as respondent­s were members of the IATF, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, Interior Secretary Eduardo Año, Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade, Education Secretary Leonor Briones and Makati City Mayor Abby Binay.

The petition for certiorari, prohibitio­n, and mandamus with urgent applicatio­n for writ of preliminar­y injunction and/or temporary restrainin­g order was filed by a group of 15 petitioner­s, including members of the Concerned Doctors and Citizens of the Philippine­s, Covid Call to Humanity, Legal Lightworke­rs for Life and Liberty, and Juan Dakila Movement.

Since l ast year, t hey have been calling out the government for supposedly f orcing Filipinos to get vaccinated against COVID-19 and implementi­ng policies that discrimina­te against those who refuse.

The petitioner­s included a COVID-19 vaccine-injured employee, doctors, scientists, a lawyer, religious leaders,

government and private sector employees in Makati City, as well as public school teachers affected by policies of government agencies and local government­s on mandatory vaccinatio­n.

The petition mainly cited IATF Resolution No. 148-B issued on Nov. 11, 2021, which requires employees in private and public establishm­ents doing on- site work to be fully vaccinated.

Di f f e r e nt g overnmen t agencies subsequent­ly issued orders and memorandum circulars to help implement the IATF resolution.

“We have a very powerful and comprehens­ive legal case against these government bodies,” said lead petitioner Nicanor Perlas.

“The science and the law do not support the assailed executive

issuances of these agencies. The COVID-19 vaccines are not safe and effective. Many authoritat­ive scientific studies and data from prestigiou­s government agencies show that the vaccinated can still get sick with COVID-19, can still end up in the hospital, and still die from the disease,” he added.

“In addition, the vaccines themselves have killed tens of thousands and harmed millions as revealed by official government statistics around the world,” Perlas said.

The government, especially the Department of Health and the National Task Force Against COVID-19, has repeatedly assured the public that COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective as shown by legitimate studies and health experts.

It has also cited “minimal” cases of adverse side effects, especially among minors given the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer.

“We hope that the Supreme Court will be open and take judicial notice of the massive amount of legal evidence against mandatory vaccinatio­ns that we have presented. If the people feel that government leaders have failed them, they should still be able to rely on the courts to uphold the Constituti­on and the Bill of Rights,” said Juan Dakila convener lawyer Aaron Soguilon, a member of the petitioner­s’ legal team.

As of May 11, more than 68 million Filipinos had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, or 62 percent of the country’s more than 110 million population. Only 13.5 million, however, have availed themselves of booster shots.

The government’s goal is to fully vaccinate 90 million people before President Duterte leaves office by June 30. ©

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