In an international rights conference in London
Impunity and terror
continue under Pnoy - KARAPATAN
Press Release
By KARAPATAN
February 24, 2012
“There has been no
let-up in the terror and violence especially against human rights
defenders under the administration of Noynoy Aquino. Impunity persists
because Aquino, despite all his rhetoric on human rights, has been
passive in making former Pres. Arroyo and her top generals accountable
for rights violations, perhaps because his administration promotes the
same brand of terror and violence on the ground.”
Thus said Karapatan
spokesperson Cristina Palabay today as she and Atty. Edre Olalia of
the National Union of People’s Lawyers joined human rights defenders
from Colombia, Palestine, Belarus, Belgium, Chechnya, the Netherlands,
Belgium and the United Kingdom in a conference of human rights
defenders organized by the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers,
Amnesty International, and the European Association of Lawyers for
Democracy and World Human Rights in London.
The delegates also met
with United Kingdom parliamentarians led by MP Jeremy Corbyn to brief
them of the current human rights situation in the country. Corbyn also
gave the opening remarks during the said conference.
In a paper presented
by Karapatan and NUPL and in the workshops, Karapatan raised the
recent killing of Fr. Fausto “Pops” Tentorio as among the most recent
attacks against human rights defenders, while police investigation is
yet to pinpoint the mastermind of the killing even if authorities
claimed that they have arrested a suspect last December.
“Fr. Pops is among the
37 human rights defenders who are victims of extrajudicial killings (EJKs)
under the Aquino administration, with the total number of victims
documented at 67 in the one and a half years of his presidency. There
is approximately one EJK per week. Three out of nine victims of
enforced disappearances are human rights defenders. Most of them are
farmers, indigenous peoples, workers and the urban poor who are
defending their right to land, ancestral domain, livelihood, decent
housing, jobs and other basic and fundamental rights,” they said.
Palabay said further
attacks against human rights defenders are looming with the
counter-insurgency program Oplan Bayanihan, no different from Arroyo’s
Oplan Bantay Laya, enforced. She cited the threat against 72 leaders
of people’s organizations and institutions, including leaders of
Karapatan in Southern Tagalog, to be again charged with baseless and
trumped up cases of multiple murder, despite a court dismissal of the
same charges.
“The case of the
Southern Tagalog 72 and the threat that warrants of arrests may be
issued against them despite the dismissal of the same charges
previously is illustrative of the situation of HRDs in the
Philippines
– threatened, vilified, heaped upon with fabricated charges,
imprisoned, silenced,” Palabay added.
Palabay will also
head the delegation of the Philippine UPR Watch, a network of
organizations and church institutions engaging in the Universal
Periodic Review process, in Geneva, Switzerland this coming February
27 to March 13, 2012.