Philippine Daily Inquirer

Malaya Lolas slam gov’t ‘failure’ to meet UN ruling

The remaining survivors of Japanese sexual abuse got only three tranches of P10K from DSWD, nowhere close to the recommenda­tions made by UN-Cedaw

- By Tonette T. Orejas @ttorejasIN­Q

ANGELES CITY—The financial aid given by the administra­tion of President Marcos to survivors of wartime sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army is “not in compliance” with the decision of the United Nations to help them, the women’s group Kaisa-Ka said.

Lawyer Virginia Lacsa Suarez, chair of Kaisa-Ka, pointed this out in a forum held before the launch of the exhibit “Behind the Battle of the Malaya Lolas” at the Museum of Philippine Social History here on April 13.

Kaisa-Ka is a support group of Malaya Lolas (Free Grandmothe­rs) who spoke about the sexual abuses on them by Japanese soldiers starting with the Nov. 23, 1944, attack on Barangay Mapaniqui in Candaba town in Pampanga.

Since they opened up about their ordeal in 1996, they only obtained the favorable UN decision on March 8, 2023, after the Center for Internatio­nal Law in the Philippine­s, through lawyer Romel Regalado Bagares, filed a complaint on behalf of 24 of the 96 Malaya Lolas.

“The P10,000 given thrice by the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) to the 18 surviving Malaya Lolas under its women-in-conflict program and the P5,000 educationa­l aid given to as many as three grandchild­ren per Malaya Lola do not comply with the March 8, 2023, decision of the Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Discrimina­tion against Women (Cedaw) of the United Nations,” Suarez explained to an audience gathered at the Alaya Women’s Center.

The DSWD’s aid came after Mr. Marcos issued a letter of instructio­n ordering government agencies to help the Malaya Lolas, Suarez said, adding that Kaisa-Ka also asked the Department of Health to provide medical services to the 18 survivors.

Neither the Philippine Commission on Women nor the Department of Justice had made public their written response to the UN decision or the actions undertaken from the list of recommenda­tions.

Reparation scheme

In the 19-page decision, the Cedaw recommende­d that the Philippine government “establish an effective, nationwide reparation scheme to provide all forms of redress to victims of war crimes, including sexual violence, with equal access for men who are war veterans and women who are survivors of wartime sexual slavery...”

The decision told the government to establish a state-sanctioned fund to provide compensati­on and other forms of reparation to women who are victims of war crimes, particular­ly “the institutio­nalized system of wartime sexual slavery, to ensure the restoratio­n of their dignity, value and personal liberty.”

It also called for the creation of a memorial to preserve the site of Bahay na Pula (Red House) in San Ildefonso town of Bulacan province, where the women were brought and raped, or establish another space to commemorat­e the women’s suffering.

The Cedaw cited “Optional Protocol” and asked the Philippine­s to “give due considerat­ion to the views of the committee, together with its recommenda­tions, and submit to the committee, within six months, a written response, including informatio­n on any action taken in the light of those views and recommenda­tions.”

But the Philippine government had declined to help the Malaya Lolas, saying they had already received reparation funds from Japan after the war.

“The Malaya Lolas broke their silence only in 1996, so how could they have been compensate­d for the abuses?” asked Suarez.

 ?? —TONETTE T. OREJAS ?? NOW DOWN TO 18 In this file photo taken in 2007, the Malaya Lolas counted around 70 from 96 women in 1996 when they first spoke of the sexual abuses by Japanese soldiers during World War II. This April, only 18 women are still alive, mostly bedridden by ailments and old age.
—TONETTE T. OREJAS NOW DOWN TO 18 In this file photo taken in 2007, the Malaya Lolas counted around 70 from 96 women in 1996 when they first spoke of the sexual abuses by Japanese soldiers during World War II. This April, only 18 women are still alive, mostly bedridden by ailments and old age.

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