The Philippine Star

Don’t fund substandar­d drug rehab facility, Japan urged

- RHODINA VILLANUEVA

A human rights group has urged the Japanese government not to fund Philippine government drug rehabilita­tion services that fall short of internatio­nal standards.

In a letter addressed to Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and president Shinichi Kitaoka of the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) dated April 28, Human Rights Watch said the Japanese government should not support potentiall­y abusive approaches to drug rehabilita­tion.

“JICA should disclose precisely what kind of drug rehabilita­tion services it is funding and the safeguards it has imposed to ensure that Japan isn’t supporting services or facilities that are violating the human rights of people seeking drug treatment,” Kanae Doi, HRW Japan director, said.

JICA, which funds overseas developmen­t initiative­s, agreed in April of this year to provide the Department of Health $17 million in funds for the upgrade of drug rehabilita­tion centers and enhancemen­t of treatment protocols for drug dependents.

“The Philippine­s desperatel­y needs voluntary, community-based drug dependence treatment services that comport with internatio­nal standards and human rights principles. However, neither JICA nor the health department has provided any details about how the Philippine government will spend those funds,” the group said.

Doi noted that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s offer of “meaningful assistance measures to address the issue of illegal drugs” in the Philippine­s is questionab­le given the serious human-rights violations linked to (President) Duterte’s “war on drugs.”

Since Duterte took office in June 2016, police and unidentifi­ed gunmen have killed thousands of suspected drug users and drug dealers, HRW noted.

“The Philippine government’s response to the surge in demand for drug rehabilita­tion facilities – the December 2016 opening of a China-funded ‘10,000-bed mega treatment and rehabilita­tion center’ within the Fort Magsaysay military base 120 kilometers north of Manila – raises concerns that instead of evidence-based drug treatment services, the rehabilita­tion services may mirror abusive models documented by Human Rights Watch elsewhere in Southeast Asia,” Doi pointed out.

The group said the Japanese and Philippine government­s should avoid the abusive practices uncovered in Cambodia, China, Laos and Vietnam, whose reliance on involuntar­y drug rehabilita­tion approaches has been linked to serious humanright­s violations.

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