The Philippine Star

Fallout between old friends; traditiona­l ties reaffirmed

- By PIA LEE BRAGO

It was a year of antagonism toward old friends as well as reaffirmat­ion of traditiona­l friendship­s for Philippine foreign relations.

The government’s vicious war on drugs has tainted the country’s image in the internatio­nal community and reaped condemnati­on from influentia­l personalit­ies and major institutio­ns like the European Union.

In July, 18 of 47 membercoun­tries of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) voted in favor of a resolution that sought a comprehens­ive report on the human rights situation in the Philippine­s amid allegation­s of thousands of extrajudic­ial killings of suspected drug offenders. Iceland proposed the resolution at the 41st session of the UNHRC in Geneva.

Fourteen member-states – including China – voted against the resolution, while 15 abstained.

The resolution, dismissed by the Duterte administra­tion as “tiny majority-approved and one-sided,” also urges the government to cooperate with UN agencies that would be involved in any probe.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. made it clear, however, that any investigat­ion stipulated in the ruling won’t be allowed, as even the holy spirit is “100 percent in favor” of the Philippine­s’ war on drugs.

He also raised the possibilit­y of the country withdrawin­g from the UNHRC, but later clarified it won’t severe relations with the institutio­n or with any other nation.

He expressed his contempt at France and other Western countries for supporting the Iceland-initiated resolution.

“The ones who don’t take daily showers already invented their facts; the Queen in Alice: ‘First the judgment then the trial.’ They’re not gonna change fantasy for the truth. Too much trouble. They’d have to exhume at least 5,000 bodies not to say 27,000 as falsely claimed,” Locsin said on Twitter.

Rome Statute withdrawal

Earlier, the Philippine­s withdrew from the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC). Its withdrawal became effective on March 17, 2019.

But ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda announced that the ICC’s preliminar­y examinatio­ns into the situation in the Philippine­s would continue and that the court retains its jurisdicti­on over crimes committed in the context of the “war on drugs.”

Her announceme­nt came after Malacañang said that ICC representa­tives would be barred from entering the Philippine­s if they insist on investigat­ing alleged extrajudic­ial killings tied to the war against illegal drugs. The number of deaths linked to the administra­tion’s anti-drug campaign has reached thousands since Duterte assumed the presidency in 2016.

The antagonism between foreign affairs officials and diplomats from countries deemed critical of the drug war was palpable even at social functions.

In a tweet in October, Locsin admitted that he had prohibited representa­tives of his department from attending the celebratio­ns of countries that favored the Iceland resolution.

No representa­tive of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) showed up for the traditiona­l diplomatic toast at the celebratio­n of Bastille Day, the French National Day, on July 14 at the official residence of the French ambassador in Forbes Park, Makati.

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

French Ambassador Nicolas Galey said France’s co-sponsoring the Iceland resolution is not the “alpha and omega” of internatio­nal relations and should not put in danger the friendship between the two countries.

There was a DFA representa­tive, however, at the German Unity Day in October.

Foreign Affairs Undersecre­tary for policy Enrique Manalo represente­d the Philippine­s at the event and even offered the traditiona­l toast with German Ambassador Anke Reiffenstu­el. France and Germany are cosponsors of the Iceland-initiated resolution.

Locsin showed up in November at the Czech Republic’s 30th Velvet Revolution anniversar­y that he called “one of the most fun national days ever.”

Earlier in February, the German foreign ministry summoned the acting Philippine ambassador to Germany after Locsin made “totally unacceptab­le” remarks regarding the Holocaust.

He had dismissed as “metaphor” Duterte’s comparing his bloody war on drugs to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler’s killing of six million Jews.

Locsin defended his comments, saying Hitler’s massacre of Jews was “historical fact.”

Closer to home, the DFA had to deal with a potentiall­y hostile scenario with China after a Chinese vessel rammed and sank a Filipino fishing boat in the vicinity of Recto (Reed) Bank in the West Philippine Sea on the night of June 9.

After ramming the Filipino boat F/B Gem-Ver 1, the Chinese hurriedly left without rescuing the fishermen. A Vietnamese fishing boat later rescued the 22 distressed Filipinos.

Locsin denounced the Chinese abandonmen­t of the distressed fishermen in a speech at the 25th anniversar­y of the coming into force of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

He said the “duty to render assistance” is enshrined in internatio­nal law and in the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on (IMO)’s Internatio­nal Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea and the IMO Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue.

The Recto Bank incident prompted the DFA to file a diplomatic protest against China.

In August, the owner of the Chinese ship finally apologized to the 22 Filipino fishermen for the collision and “unintentio­nal” mistake.

Locsin clarified that the apology relayed to Filipino fishermen by the owner of the Chinese vessel was “merely noted” and not accepted.

He also clarified in the same tweet that presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo “merely expressed satisfacti­on with the Chinese apology for the incident and the offer of compensati­on and nothing more.”

Swarming Pag-asa

The DFA again “fired off” a diplomatic protest against Beijing in response to the “swarming” of Chinese vessels around Pag-asa Island.

China assured the Philippine­s that it has always been “a builder of world peace, contributo­r to global developmen­t and defender of internatio­nal order.”

China also called itself a “role model” in internatio­nal rules compliance.

Earlier in March, former foreign affairs chief Albert del Rosario and former ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales filed with the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) a complaint against Chinese President Xi Jinping in connection with China’s environmen­tally destructiv­e activities in the South China Sea, particular­ly its building of artificial islands.

They said China’s “atrocious” actions in the South China Sea and in Philippine waters constitute a crime against humanity. Both officials were later barred from entering Hong Kong for unspecifie­d reasons.

The ICC later said it did not act on the complaint filed by the two former officials, for lack of jurisdicti­on.

But Del Rosario and Morales explained the ICC decision was not a dismissal of their complaint but a call for “new facts and evidence.”

Meanwhile, the US assured the Philippine­s of its commitment to the 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) despite President Duterte’s muchvaunte­d “pivot to China” and “separation” from the US.

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