The Philippine Star

Amnesty Int’l airs concern over ‘disrespect’ of freedoms

- By ARTEMIO DUMLAO and RHODINA VILLANUEVA

Human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) has expressed “grave concern” over what it described as “crackdown” by the Philippine government against foreign activists in the country.

Citing the Aug. 14 expulsion of Australian lawyer, academic and human rights activist Gill Boehringer, who had visited the Philippine­s on numerous occasions over the past decade, AI on Friday called on Philippine authoritie­s “to end its harassment of peaceful activists who enter the country and to respect the rights to freedom of expression and assembly of all peaceful activists, including non-nationals.”

Boehringer was expelled by the Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI), citing his participat­ion in “domestic protest actions in the past.”

Boehringer, 84, arrived in the Philippine­s from Sydney on the evening of Aug. 7. According to his lawyer, immigratio­n agents prevented him from leaving the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport as he was on the BI’s “blacklist.”

Boehringer, accoding to his lawyer, had been earlier instructed by the BI to board the earliest flight on Aug. 9 to China, from where he was expected to take a flight to Australia.

But AI said his doctor expressed serious concerns about having Boehringer fly out of the country so soon, as he had by then developed a serious medical condition and needed treatment.

The Department of Justice (DOJ), however, refused the Australian lawyer’s entry into the Philippine­s, citing Boehringer’s alleged participat­ion in the mass demonstrat­ions during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meeting in November 2015 and in another rally in February of this year as reasons.

Boehringer denied participat­ion in the No- vember 2015 protest. He claimed he travelled to southern Philippine­s in February 2018 to observe educationa­l activities at a school there, but there was no rally or political activity held during his visit.

His lawyer had said that while he has been “a critic of some of the policies and practices of three successive government­s since coming to the Philippine­s as an Internatio­nal Election Observer in 2007 and 2010,” this should be seen as his “contributi­on (to) the vibrant national discourse about how democracy can be strengthen­ed, the rule of law protected and social justice ensured.”

Before his expulsion, Boehringer spent a week at the airport. His lawyer claimed Boehringer “has not been informed in writing of the reasons for his expulsion.”

AI stressed “the denial of entry to human rights activists for such reasons obstructs their right to defend human rights and can amount to a denial of their rights to freedom of expression and of peaceful assembly, as guaranteed by internatio­nal human rights law.”

Such expulsions also create a negative effect on the exercise of the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly by nonnationa­ls who may now decide to reduce their activities in the country for fear of the action the Philippine authoritie­s might take against them, it added.

The human rights group also stressed that “under internatio­nal law, states are obliged to treat all persons as equal before the law and without discrimina­tion on any ground, including political or other opinion.”

AI said the expulsion of Boehringer “takes place in the context of other recent denial of entry or expulsions of foreign missionari­es and activists because they have allegedly engaged in protest actions in the Philippine­s in the past.”

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