Philippine Daily Inquirer

AMID PROTESTS, PALACE VOWS TO PURSUE WAR ON CRIME

- —REPORTS FROM JULIE M. AURELIO, LEILA B. SALAVERRIA, CHRISTINE O. AVENDAÑO, AIE BALAGTAS SEE, KIMBERLIE QUITASOL, TONETTE OREJAS, MAR S. ARGUELLES, DELFIN T. MALLARI JR., MARICAR CINCO, JOEY A. GABIETA, CARLA P. GOMEZ, NESTOR P. BURGOS JR. ANDJIGGER J. JE

Malacañang on Monday promised to pursue an unrelentin­g campaign against illegal drugs, crime, corruption, terrorism and insurgency as activists and militants took to the streets to demand an end to abuses against the people and a lawmaker called President Duterte the “biggest threat to human rights.”

Human rights defenders and relatives of victims of alleged extrajudic­ial killings gathered in different parts of Metro Manila, Central Luzon and major cities in the Visayas and Mindanao to condemn Mr. Duterte’s bloody war on drugs, deadly attacks on militants, imposition of martial law in Mindanao, and the plan to form a hit team to assassinat­e communist rebels.

In a statement, the Presidenti­al Human Rights Committee headed by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea pledged to “further human rights” under Mr. Duterte’s leadership.

“Every administra­tion has its own emphasis and approach in its efforts to make human rights real for our people. Today, we further humanright­s in the era of Mr. Duterte along relevant paths reflected in our theme for this year’s observance: ‘Protecting Human Lives, Uplifting Human Dignity, and Advancing People’s Progress,’” Medialdea said.

“To protect the lives of the innocent, law-abiding citizens of the country, this administra­tion remains unrelentin­g in its crusade against criminalit­y, corruption, terrorism, insurgency, and the proliferat­ion of illegal drugs that destroy families and the future of the young,” he said.

Medialdea issued the statement as the Philippine­s joined the rest of the world in marking the 70th anniversar­y of the adoption of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

President Duterte has been criticized by local and internatio­nal human rights groups over thousands of deaths in his brutal war on drugs, which rights advocates have called extrajudic­ial killings.

The Philippine National Police has acknowledg­ed the killings in police operations of 4,999 drug suspects from July 1, 2016, to Oct. 31 this year, but rights groups have given higher figures, with Karapatan saying the toll is more than 20,000.

Informatio­n from at least two groups of complainan­ts has been brought against Mr. Duterte in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), asking for an investigat­ion of what could be crimes against humanity.

Preliminar­y investigat­ion

The ICC has opened a preliminar­y investigat­ion, angering Mr. Duterte, who responded by withdrawin­g the Philippine­s from the Rome Statute, the internatio­nal treaty that underpins the ICC.

ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda, however, has said that the withdrawal will not affect the investigat­ion, as the killings happened while the Philippine­s was a member of the ICC, and that assessment of the situation in the country will continue even after the withdrawal takes effect next March.

Mr. Duterte said last week that he was taking full responsibi­lity for the killings, and vowed to press his war on drugs, which he swore would be no less harsh than when it started after he took office in 2016.

For that statement and his attacks on critics of the drug war, including Catholic bishops who he said last week the people should kill, opposition Sen. Risa Hontiveros sees Mr. Duterte as “the biggest threat to human rights” in the Philippine­s.

“The President has singlehand­edly rolled back human rights safeguards and made the country a haven for human rights violators,” Hontiveros said in a statement on Monday.

But Filipinos don’t have to live in the kind of environmen­t that Mr. Duterte has created, she said.

Stand up

Hontiveros called on the people to stand up for their rights.

“We cannot continue treading this path. I call on the people to push back and stand up against the threat to our human rights. When the institutio­ns we build to protect us are used against us, we prove aspiring tyrants wrong and take them back,” she said.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo said Hontiveros was “entitled to her opinion.”

Mr. Duterte respects human rights, Panelo insisted.

“We have been saying so and we have shown it. We prosecute people who violate human rights,” Panelo said.

Sen. Leila de Lima, detained on what she calls trumped-up drug charges, also issued a statement, noting a “growing absence of human rights leadership in the world today.”

“Some government­s themselves, led mostly by populist demagogues and autocrats, have actually attacked their own people. And far too many politician­s and so-called leaders, including those in my country, the Philippine­s, seem to have forgotten the [Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights],” De Lima said.

Collective action

She called on the people to take collective action for the commondefe­nse of human rights.

“We cannot remain quiet and rely passively on government­s. We the people ourselves have to act—act urgently and in solidarity with one another,” she said.

Hundreds of human rights defenders marched across Manila on Monday to protest the Duterte administra­tion’s alleged abuses.

“This is a united people’s march for human rights,” said Ellecer Carlos, leader of the rights group iDefend.

Carlos said the groups intended to rouse the public and remind people about the importance of human rights.

“The public should realize that it is up to them to form a critical opposition,” Carlos said.

In the City of San Fernando in Pampanga province, the rights watchdog Karapatan led the march against President Duterte’s “murderous, vindictive and tyrannical rule,” while in Baguio, students, teachers and pastors from the United Churches of Christ in the Philippine­s marched with black ribbons marked “resist tyranny” tied to their heads and arms.

‘Dictatoria­l rule’

In the Visayas, thousands of human rights advocates took to the streets in Iloilo, Leyte, Capiz, Aklan and Negros Occidental to decry what they called President Duterte’s “creeping nationwide dictatoria­l rule.”

“This President is spitting on the rule of law, implementi­ng it when it favors him but disregardi­ng it when it [does not],” said businessma­n Aurelio Servando, who joined the march in Iloilo City.

“Thousands [have been] killed. There is no stopping him. Every day he keeps on telling his people to kill and kill,” Servando added.

The marchers also condemned Mr. Duterte’s plan to form a hit team to assassinat­e communist rebels.

“Even without the formal and open creation of this hit team, unarmed activists, lawyers, leaders of militant groups are already being targeted and killed. It is unimaginab­le that the President himself has openly advocated for the creation of a group [that] will murder,” said Reylan Vergara, national vice chair of the human rights group Karapatan.

In Bicol, hundreds of militants marched through Legazpi City in Albay province urging the Duterte administra­tion to end abuses against the people, including alleged extrajudic­ial killings in the war on drugs.

Martial law in Mindanao

In Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental province, human rights groups marked the day with mass actions against the government’s plan to extend martial law in Mindanao for another year.

The groups slammed the government for claiming that there had been no rights abuses in Mindanao since martial law was imposed on the island last year after terrorists seized Marawi City.

According to the Movement Against Tyranny, there were four killings, seven frustrated killings, four disappeara­nces, 47 trumped-up charges, 43 illegal arrests and detentions, 32 arbitrary arrests, 567 victims of threat, harassment and intimidati­on, and 927 victims of fake surrenders this year alone.

 ?? —EARVIN PERIAS ?? NOTO MILITARIZA­TION OF COMMUNITIE­S Indigenous people protest outside the Senate building to oppose the extension of martial law in Mindanao, which they say is an instrument to wrest control of their ancestral lands during Monday’s commemorat­ion of Internatio­nal Human Rights Day.
—EARVIN PERIAS NOTO MILITARIZA­TION OF COMMUNITIE­S Indigenous people protest outside the Senate building to oppose the extension of martial law in Mindanao, which they say is an instrument to wrest control of their ancestral lands during Monday’s commemorat­ion of Internatio­nal Human Rights Day.
 ?? —BARRY M. OHAYLAN ?? STREET DRAMA Militant artists stage a street play depicting human rights violations allegedly committed by the Duterte administra­tion during a rally marking the 70th observance of Internatio­nal Human Rights Day in Davao City.
—BARRY M. OHAYLAN STREET DRAMA Militant artists stage a street play depicting human rights violations allegedly committed by the Duterte administra­tion during a rally marking the 70th observance of Internatio­nal Human Rights Day in Davao City.

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