We,
the undersigned organisations, express our utmost concern over the ongoing
criminalization of ten human rights defenders and members of Karapatan,
GABRIELA and the Rural Missionaries of the Philippines (RMP) in retaliation for
their legitimate human rights work.
Elisa Tita Lubi, Karapatan Chairperson; Cristina Palabay,
Karapatan Secretary General; Roneo Clamor, Karapatan Deputy Secretary
General; Gabriela Krista Dalena, Karapatan Treasurer; Edita Burgos;
Wilfredo Ruazol, and Jose Mari Callueng, Karapatan National
Council members; Gertrudes Ranjo Libang, Gabriela Chairperson; Joan
May Salvador, Gabriela Secretary General; and Sr. Elenita Belardo,
RMP member, are facing trial before the Quezon City Metropolitan Trial Court
Branch 37 on malicious and trumped-up charge of “perjury” in retaliation for
their actions seeking legal protection for human rights defenders. The week of
January 2, 2023 the verdict will be handed down. If convicted, they could face
up to four months or up to more than two years of imprisonment.
On
May 6, 2019, due to the alarming increase in violence against human rights
defenders in the Philippines, the above-mentioned human rights defenders from
Karapatan, Gabriela, and the RMP filed a petition for the writ of amparo
(protection order) and habeas data (access to information) before the Supreme
Court, seeking protection against threats, attacks, and harassment by
government officials. However, the Philippine Court of Appeals denied their
petition in June 2019.
Following
the rejection of the petition, the authorities responded with
retaliatory measures
against the 10 human rights defenders. On July 2, 2019, then-National Security
Adviser General Hermogenes Esperon, who was named in the petition, lodged a
complaint alleging that the 10 defendants had committed “perjury” by stating
that the RMP was a registered non-governmental organisation at the Securities
and Exchange Commission in the petition they filed before the Supreme Court.
While the perjury complaint was initially dismissed for “lack of probable cause
and/or insufficiency of evidence”, in February 2020, the Quezon City prosecutor
sustained a motion for reconsideration filed by the National Security Adviser
and found probable cause to charge the 10 human rights defenders with
“perjury”. The charges against the 10 human rights defenders have been widely
condemned by regional and global civil society organisations as well as the UN Special Rapporteur
on the situation of human rights defenders.
Since
the “perjury” charges were filed, the Department of Justice has charged at
least 16 people, including nuns, linked to the Rural Missionaries of the
Philippines with financing terrorism under Section 8(ii) of Republic Act 10168
or anti-terrorism financing act.
In
the Philippines, human rights defenders continue to face attacks, killings,
judicial harassment, arbitrary detention and stigmatisation campaigns by State
agents, proxies, supporters and enablers. Since June 2016, when President
Duterte took power, a climate of impunity for
attacks against human rights defenders worsened. The killings of defenders have
rarely been investigated, which increases the vulnerability of those who remain
active, while undermining the human rights community’s confidence in the
justice system. In addition, the Anti-Terrorism Act, which was passed in July
2020, further compounded the precarious situation for human rights defenders by
legally formalising the practice of “red-tagging” defenders with overly broad
and vague definitions of terrorism. The grave human rights situation in the
Philippines including the ongoing onslaught facing human rights defenders has
resulted in expressions of grave concern from the Office of the UN High
Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) in June 2020 and more recently a number of Members of
the European Parliament. Similarly, in April 2020, 9 UN human rights experts
expressed their concern regarding the killings, threats, detentions and
criminalization of human rights defenders in the Philippines. Both the OHCHR
and the UN human rights experts recommended establishing an international,
independent investigation of human rights violations in the Philippines.
We
call on the new President of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos Jr., to distance
himself from the previous administration, and firmly commit to respecting the
right to defend human rights. President Marcos Jr. should cease the threats and
attacks against rights defenders and ensure the protection of their rights,
including the rights to life, due process, freedom of expression, and freedom
of peaceful assembly. We urge the authorities to put an immediate end to the
judicial harassment against Elisa Tita Lubi, Cristina Palabay, Roneo Clamor,
Gabriela Krista Dalena, Edita Burgos, Wilfredo Ruazol, Jose Mari Callueng,
Gertrudes Ranjo Libang, Joan May Salvador, and Sr. Elenita Belardo. Similarly,
we call on the authorities to rescind the Anti-Terrorism Act and adopt the
Human Rights Defenders Protection Bill.
We
are inspired by the work, courage and commitment of these human rights
defenders, and stand in solidarity with all of them.
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