This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 8, March 25-31, 2007
Filipino Church Leaders Bring Issue of Slays
before Int’l Bodies Two
of the nine-member Philippine delegation of human rights defenders named the
“Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines” shared the
outcome of their lobbying efforts before various international organizations and
entities in a press conference last week in Quezon City. BY
EMILY VITAL Two of the nine-member
Philippine delegation of human rights defenders named the “Ecumenical Voice for
Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines” shared the outcome of their lobbying
efforts before various international organizations and entities in a press
conference last week in Quezon City. Bp. Eliezer Pascua, general
secretary of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) and Sharon
Rose Joy Ruiz-Duremdes, general secretary of the National Council of Churches in
the Philippines (NCCP) arrived in the Philippines early last week from North
America. “The lobby work in North
America was an important step to intensify the international pressure to stop
the killings in the Philippines,” Duremdes said. Members of the delegation
presented before international conferences their report titled, Let the
Stones Cry Out: An Ecumenical Report on Human Rights in the Philippines. The 90-page report contains
information on the violations and evidence of the complicity of government
security forces, and discusses the historical, social, economic and political
context in which the violations are committed. The report’s introduction
dramatizes the current human rights situation in the Philippines:
The Philippine Government has launched relentless military campaigns against the
'enemies of the state' and in the name of the 'rule of law' and 'political
stability.’ But the results of this strategy have been mounting reports of dead
bodies sprawled on highways and bushes, of female students abducted by armed men
in the dead of night, never to be seen again, of the cries of anguish of mothers
as their sons – felled by assassins’ bullets – die in their arms, of a
well-loved Bishop bathed in his own blood after being stabbed several times, and
of children terrorized and traumatized by soldiers who have taken over their
villages. In the U.S., the team
attended a hearing before the Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee headed by Sen. Barbara Boxer. At the hearing, the team
urged the Foreign Relations Committees of the Senate and the House of
Representatives to urge the Philippine Government to stop the killings, to bring
perpetrators to justice and to rescind labeling human rights activists as
"enemies of the state." Duremdes related that Senator Boxer accepted all their
calls. In
reaction to accusations from some Philippine government officials that the
hearings in the U.S. were a case of intervention into domestic affairs, Duremdes
said: “We believe that respect for human rights goes beyond national boundaries
and anyone has a right to raise human rights issues anywhere, everywhere. What
the team did was to merely remind the Philippine government of its duty to
comply with its commitment to uphold international law.”
Duremdes also clarified that it was the churches in the U.S. that asked for the
hearing and that they were only invited as resource persons. The team also participated
in the fifth annual Advocacy Days, an event sponsored by more than 50 churches
that draws 1,000 people to Washington to lobby their senators and congressmen.
The team also came to address the International Ecumenical Conference on Human
Rights in the Philippines on March 12-14. Meanwhile, Duremdes said,
in Canada they challenged the Canadian government, through its members of
Parliament to denounce the extrajudicial killings in the Philippines, to review
its development and military assistance to the Philippines insofar as this is
being used to exacerbate the killings of human rights defenders and social
activists. “Our experience in Canada
was one of genuine openness on the part of the members of the Parliament to
raise the issue in the Subcommittee on International Human Rights of the House
of Commons,” she said. “The churches, human rights and justice groups readily
offered support in sustaining the campaign though public awareness building and
lobby work with their MPs.” At the time of their visit,
the House of Commons was in recess. Duremdes said that some
members of the team are in Geneva to submit the ecumenical report before the UN
Human Rights Council. Other members of the
Philippine delegation include Most Rev. Deogracias Iniguez, D.D. of the
Commission on Ecumenical Affairs of the Catholic Bishop's Conference of the
Philippines (CBCP); Amirah Ali Lidasan, secretary-general and co-founder of the
Moro-Christian People's Alliance (MCPA); Fr. Rex R.B. Reyes of the Christian
Unity and Ecumenical Relations of the NCCP; Rev. Marma Urbano, a pastor
of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) and executive director
of the Institute for Religion and Culture; Sr. Maureen Catabian of the Women and
Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation of the Religious of the Good Shepherd;
and, Marie Hilao-Enriquez, general secretary of human rights group Karapatan
also formed part of the delegation. James Winkler, general
secretary of the U.S.-based United Methodist Church - General Board of Church
and Society, and Rev. Liberato Bautista, assistant general secretary for United
Nations and International Affairs accompanied the Philippine delegation.
Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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