The Philippine Star

De Lima questions ground rules for UN visit

- By MARVIN SY

Sen. Leila de Lima has questioned the ground rules handed down by the administra­tion for the visit of the United Nations special rapporteur­s who would look into the summary killings in the country.

De Lima, who filed a resolution seeking the invitation of UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudic­ial, Summary and Arbitrary Killings Agnes Callamard to the country, said that the parameters provided by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) for the work of the probers are restrictiv­e and smacks of prior censorship.

“While it is within the prerogativ­es of the Philippine government as the host country, through the DFA, to set reasonable parameters for the visit of the UN special rapporteur­s and other UN probers, I find questionab­le the announced rule that it is the government that will decide the places to be visited and the persons to be interviewe­d by these probers,” De Lima said in a statement.

“What kind of investigat­ion do we expect if the government is going to decide how the investigat­ion is going to be conducted by the UN rapporteur’s team?

“What is the sense of inviting independen­t probers if they are not going to be allowed freedom of movement and action, and are going to be dictated upon on the extent of their visits and sources of informatio­n?” she added.

DFA spokesman Charles Jose said the other day that the UN special rapporteur­s have to follow the protocols set by the host country, including the need to secure approval from the government on the personalit­ies they will interview and the places they will visit.

He said that the special rapporteur­s would have to agree to the protocols before they would be allowed visit the country.

De Lima said that any investigat­ion “under such constraint­s can no longer be deemed independen­t.”

“Protocol does not mean censorship and control over the ability of the UN team to conduct an independen­t, credible and exhaustive probe,” she added.

De Lima has been critical of President Duterte’s war on illegal drugs because of the growing number of deaths recorded daily, either at the hands of the police or unknown assailants, including vigilantes.

“This call for a speedy and impartial investigat­ion is justified by the perception that our local institutio­ns of law enforcemen­t and justice, including domestic mechanisms of accountabi­lity of public officials, appear to be either inadequate, compromise­d or weak,” De Lima said in her resolution.

“Agencies and organs within the Executive Department such as the PNP and the National Bureau of Investigat­ion cannot be expected to even initiate, much more sustain, an independen­t investigat­ion into the killings,” she added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines