The Philippine Star

HR talks not an attack on Phl — EU envoy

- By PIA LEE-BRAGO

It is saddening that discussion­s on human rights situation in the Philippine­s are being seen as attacks on the country, European Union Ambassador Franz Jessen said.

In an interview on “The Chiefs” Tuesday night on One News-Cignal TV, Jessen emphasized that raising human rights issue before internatio­nal institutio­ns like the EU and the United Nations is not intended to besmirch the image of the Philippine­s and its leaders.

“That has not been that easy and I think we have to be much better on the EU side to explain how this actually works also for the Philippine­s,” Jessen said.

“I’m sorry to see that human rights has been seen as anti-Philippine­s which is not the intention. To talk about human rights should not be seen as something that is attacking the Philippine­s. That has never been the intention,” he said.

He explained that human rights issues being discussed before the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) is a “perfect scenario” that should not surprise anybody.

“For me the discussion in Geneva in the Human Rights Council was actually the right place to have a discussion on human rights. You have specialize­d forum where human rights experts are sitting together and talk about human rights,” Jessen said.

“That means we don’t have to talk about it everywhere because it has been talked among the experts in Geneva,” he pointed out.

He said the Philippine government has shown a “a little bit of irritation” to EU nations that voted in favor of a resolution introduced by Iceland seeking an investigat­ion into the Duterte administra­tion’s bloody war on drugs. The same resolution has also urged the Philippine government to do more to prevent extrajudic­ial killings, linked to its campaign against illegal drugs.

The EU official did not specify how Philippine authoritie­s manifested their irritation.

“We have seen with receptions and couple of other things that turned out to be a bit more complicate­d than usual. But I think at the end of the day, the government – they probably do see that – yes to talk about human rights in the Human Rights Council should not surprise anybody,” he added.

No one from the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) was available for the celebratio­n of the French National Day last July 14.

Sources said the French embassy was informed by the DFA that no one from the department would be available for the Bastille Day celebratio­n.

Manila’s not sending representa­tive to the event was seen as a show of disapprova­l of France’s co-sponsoring the Iceland resolution. The resolution got 18 votes in favor and 14 against. There were 15 abstention­s.

The resolution also calls on the Philippine government to cooperate with the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights by facilitati­ng country visits and “refraining from all acts of intimidati­on or retaliatio­n” against rights experts.

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