Philippine Daily Inquirer

UN SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON EJKS TO VISIT PH ON GOV’T’S INVITATION

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­INQ

The Philippine­s has invited a special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary and arbitrary executions as part of its capacity building under the United Nations Joint Programme (UNJP), Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla said on Monday.

“We also invited a third one on extrajudic­ial killings (EJKs) because we want to increase and do capacity building for our forensic pathologis­ts in the country,” Remulla said at a press briefing, referring to Morris Tidball-Binz, a physician from Chile who specialize­s in forensic science, human rights and humanitari­an action.

“And he welcomed our invitation... Actually our invitation was more of a follow-up already on an agreed program that we had in the UNJP for capacity building of our forensic pathologis­ts, so that we can train more forensic pathologis­ts in the country,” the justice secretary said.

Tidball-Binz, he said, is expected to visit the country by early next year, adding that the government’s invitation shows that the Philippine­s is “a country open to suggestion­s and a country that does not deny that there are problems within the system... and [is] open to improving whatever situation there is.”

There are only two licensed and internatio­nally recognized forensic pathologis­ts in the country—Doctors Raquel Fortun and Cecilia Lim.

“The rest of them are medicolega­l experts but not the level of forensic pathologis­ts that we want,” Remulla said.

‘Armed movement, terrorism’

Two other UN special rapporteur­s are scheduled to visit the Philippine­s—Mama Fatima Singhateh, a special rapporteur on the traffickin­g and sexual exploitati­on of children, and Irene Khan, a special rapporteur on freedom of expression and media.

According to the Commission on Human Rights, Singhateh will be in the country from Nov. 28 to Dec. 8, while Khan will arrive next year.

According to Remulla, the government hopes to engage the rapporteur­s in a special dialogue “on any issue that they want to bring up.”

He added: “We don’t hide and say ‘that’s not true.’ What we’re saying is that if there’s room for improvemen­t, we will take it on and I think it’s the attitude that is really healthy for internatio­nal relations.”

“It’s a caring gesture that they want to show us and we also reciprocat­e this caring gesture by being open to all of these suggestion­s to our country,” Remulla said.

But he also hit back at some groups that were critical of his visit to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) during last week’s Universal Periodic Review of the country’s human rights situation.

“[W]e noticed that a lot of [these groups] that were very, very critical of what we were doing—these are the same organizati­ons that only go to Europe to destroy the image of our country,” he said.

“These are civil society organizati­ons that are somehow linked to the armed movement against government, linked to terrorism, those who cry about Red-tagging, those who cry about these issues. They are the ones who destroy us. Otherwise, I think we are in the right direction,” Remulla said.

Same-sex marriage

Remulla earlier led a delegation to the UNHRC which accepted 200 recommenda­tions on human rights by the council, notably a commitment to not revive the death penalty. The delegation also said it would “examine” 89 others, such as the recommenda­tions to cease the policy of Red-tagging.

Meanwhile, Remulla said the Philippine­s cannot accept a recommenda­tion on upholding same-sex marriage, as he emphasized that the country was “not culturally ready for it.”

“Culturally, our values may conflict with many of the values that they want to impose on us... Culturally, we are not ready for that. That’s what we believe, unless somebody argues otherwise. That’s our position right now,” he said.

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