UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions ends Philippine visit

February 21 , 2007

Professor Philip Alston, Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Human Rights Council on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions. 
Manila, 21 February 2007 
I have spent the past ten days in the
Philippines at the invitation of the Government in order to inquire into the phenomenon of extrajudicial executions. I am very grateful to the Government for the unqualified cooperation extended to me. During my stay here I have met with virtually all of the relevant senior officials of Government.  They include the President, the Executive Secretary, the National Security Adviser, the Secretaries for Defence, Justice, DILG and the Peace Process. I have also met with a significant number of members of Congress on different sides of the political spectrum, the Chief Justice, the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), the Chair of the Human Rights Commission, the Ombudsman, the members of both sides of the Joint Monitoring Committee, and representatives of the MNLF and MILF. Of particular relevance to my specific concerns, I also met with Task Force Usig, and with the Melo Commission, and I have received the complete dossier compiled by TF Usig, as well as the report of the Melo Commission, the and the responses to its findings by the AFP and by retired Maj-Gen Palparan. I have also visited Baguio and
Davao and met with the regional Human Rights Commission offices, local PNP and AFP commanders, and the Mayor of Davao, among others.
 Equally importantly, roughly half of my time here was devoted to meetings with representatives of civil society, in Manila, Baguio, and
Davao. Through their extremely valuable contributions in the form of documentation and detailed testimony I have learned a great deal.
 

Let me begin by acknowledging several important elements. The first is that the Government’s invitation to visit reflects a clear recognition of the gravity of the problem, a willingness to permit outside scrutiny, and a very welcome preparedness to engage on this issue.  The assurances that I received from the President, in particular, were very encouraging. Second, I note that my visit takes place within the context of a counter-insurgency operation which takes place on a range of fronts, and I do not in any way underestimate the resulting challenges facing for the Government and the AFP. Third, I wish to clarify that my formal role is to report to the UN Human Rights Council and to the Government on the situation I have found. I consider that the very fact of my visit has already begun the process of acting as a catalyst to deeper reflection on these issues both within the national and international settings. Finally, I must emphasise that the present statement is only designed to give a general indication of some, but by no means all, of the issues to be addressed, and the recommendations put forward, in my final report. I expect that will be available sometime within the next three months. Sources of informationThe first major challenge for my mission was to obtain detailed and well supported information. I have been surprised by both the amount and the quality of information provided to me. Most key Government agencies are organized and systematic in much of their data collection and classification.  Similarly,
Philippines civil society organizations are generally sophisticated and professional. I sought, and obtained, meetings across the entire political spectrum. I leave the
Philippines with a wealth of information to be processed in the preparation of my final report.
 
But the question has still been posed as to whether the information provided to me by either all, or at least certain, local NGO groups can be considered reliable. The word ‘propaganda’ was used by many of my interlocutors.  What I took them to mean was that the overriding goal of the relevant groups in raising EJE questions was to gain political advantage in the context of a broader battle for public opinion and power, and that the HR dimensions were secondary at best.  Some went further to suggest that many of the cases were fabricated, or at least trumped up, to look more serious than they are. I consider it essential to respond to these concerns immediately. First, there is inevitably a propaganda element in such allegations. The aim is to win public sympathy and to discredit other actors. But the existence of a propaganda dimension does not, in itself, destroy the credibility of the information and allegations. I would insist, instead, on the need to apply several tests relating to credibility. First, is it only NGOs from one part of the political spectrum who are making these allegations? The answer is clearly ‘no’. Human rights groups in the
Philippines range across the entire spectrum in terms of their political sympathies, but I met no groups who challenged the basic fact that large numbers of extrajudicial executions are taking place, even if they disagreed on precise figures. Second, how compelling is the actual information presented? I found there was considerable variation ranging from submissions which were entirely credible and contextually aware all the way down to some which struck me as superficial and dubious. But the great majority are closer to the top of that spectrum than to the bottom. Third, has the information proved credible under ‘cross-examination’. My colleagues and I heard a large number of cases in depth and we probed the stories presented to us in order to ascertain their accuracy and the broader context.
 

As a result, I believe that I have gathered a huge amount of data and certainly much more than has been made available to any one of the major national inquiries. Extent of my focusMy focus goes well beyond that adopted by either TF Usig or the Melo Commission, both of which are concerned essentially with political and media killings. Those specific killings are, in many ways, a symptom of a much more extensive problem and we should not permit our focus to be limited artificially. The TF Usig/Melo scope of inquiry is inappropriate for me for several reasons: (a) The approach is essentially reactive. It is not based on an original assessment of what is going on in the country at large, but rather on what a limited  range of CSOs report. As a result, the focus then is often shifted (unhelpfully) to the orientation of the CSO, the quality of the documentation in particular cases, etc.; (b) Many killings are not reported, or not pursued, and for good reason; and 

(c) A significant proportion of acknowledged cases of ‘disappearances’ involve individuals who have been killed but who are not reflected in the figures. How many have been killed?The numbers game is especially unproductive, although a source of endless fascination. Is it 25, 100, or 800? I don’t have a figure. But I am certain that the number is high enough to be distressing. Even more importantly, numbers are not what count. The impact of even a limited number of killings of the type alleged is corrosive in many ways. It intimidates vast numbers of civil society actors, it sends a message of vulnerability to all but the most well connected, and it severely undermines the political discourse which is central to a resolution of the problems confronting this country. Permit me to make a brief comment on the term ‘unexplained killings’, which is used by officials and which I consider to be inapt and misleading. It may be appropriate in the context of a judicial process but human rights inquiries are more broad-ranging and one does not have to wait for a court to secure a conviction before one can conclude that human rights violations are occurring. The term ‘extrajudicial killings’ which has a long pedigree is far more accurate and should be used. TypologyIt may help to specify the types of killing which are of particular concern in the
Philippines:
·          Killings by military and police, and by the NPA or other groups, in course of counter-insurgency. To the extent that such killings take place in conformity with the rules of international humanitarian law they fall outside my mandate.·          Killings not in the course of any armed engagement but in pursuit of a specific counter-insurgency operation in the field.·          Killings, whether attributed to the military, the police, or private actors, of activists associated with leftist groups and usually deemed or assumed to be covertly assisting CPP-NPA-NDF. Private actors include hired thugs in the pay of politicians, landowners, corporate interests, and others.·          Vigilante, or death squad, killings ·          Killings of journalists and other media persons.·          ‘Ordinary’ murders facilitated by the sense of impunity that exists. 

Response by the GovernmentThe response of Government to the crisis of extrajudicial executions varies dramatically. There has been a welcome acknowledgement of the seriousness of the problem at the very top. At the executive level the messages have been very mixed and often unsatisfactory. And at the operational level, the allegations have too often been met with a response of incredulity, mixed with offence. Explanations profferedWhen I have sought explanations of the killings I have received a range of answers. (i) The allegations are essentially propaganda. I have addressed this dimension already. (ii) The allegations are fabricated.  Much importance was attached to two persons who had been listed as killed, but who were presented to me alive. Two errors, in circumstances which might partly explain the mistakes, do very little to discredit the vast number of remaining allegations. 

(iii) The theory that the ‘correct, accurate, and truthful’ reason for the recent rise in killings lies in purges committed by the CPP/NPA. This theory was relentlessly pushed by the AFP and many of my Government interlocutors. But we must distinguish the number of 1,227 cited by the military from the limited number of cases in which the CPP/NPA have acknowledged, indeed boasted, of killings. While such cases have certainly occurred, even those most concerned about them, such as members of Akbayan, have suggested to me that they could not amount to even 10% of the total killings.The evidence offered by the military in support of this theory is especially unconvincing. Human rights organizations have documented very few such cases. The AFP relies instead on figures and trends relating to the purges of the late 1980s, and on an alleged CPP/NPA document captured in May 2006 describing Operation Bushfire.  In the absence of much stronger supporting evidence this particular document bears all the hallmarks of a fabrication and cannot be taken as evidence of anything other than disinformation. (iv) Some killings may have been attributable to the AFP, but they were committed by rogue elements. There is little doubt that some such killings have been committed. The AFP needs to give us precise details and to indicate what investigations and prosecutions have been undertaken in response. But, in any event, the rogue elephant theory does not explain or even address the central questions with which we are concerned. Some major challenges for the future (a) Acknowledgement by the AFPThe AFP remains in a state of almost total denial (as its official response to the Melo Report amply demonstrates) of its need to respond effectively and authentically to the significant number of killings which have been convincingly attributed to them. The President needs to persuade the military that its reputation and effectiveness will be considerably enhanced, rather than undermined, by acknowledging the facts and taking genuine steps to investigate. When the Chief of the AFP contents himself with telephoning Maj-Gen Palparan three times in order to satisfy himself that the persistent and extensive allegations against the General were entirely unfounded, rather than launching a thorough internal investigation, it is clear that there is still a very long way to go. 

(b) Moving beyond the Melo CommissionIt is not for me to evaluate the Melo Report. That is for the people of the
Philippines to do. The President showed good faith in responding to allegations by setting up an independent commission.  But the political and other capital that should have followed is being slowly but surely drained away by the refusal to publish the report.  The justifications given are unconvincing. The report was never intended to be preliminary or interim. The need to get ‘leftists’ to testify is no reason to withhold a report which in some ways at least vindicates their claims. And extending a Commission whose composition has never succeeded in winning full cooperation seems unlikely to cure the problems still perceived by those groups. Immediate release of the report is an essential first step.
 (c) The need to restore accountabilityThe focus on TF Usig and Melo is insufficient.  The enduring and much larger challenge is to restore the various accountability mechanisms that the Philippines Constitution and Congress have put in place over the years, too many of which have been systematically drained of their force in recent years. I will go into detail in my final report, but suffice it to note for present purposes that Executive Order 464, and its replacement, Memorandum Circular 108, undermine significantly the capacity of Congress to hold the executive to account in any meaningful way. (d) Witness protectionThe vital flaw which undermines the utility of much of the judicial system is the problem of virtual impunity that prevails.  This, in turn, is built upon the rampant problem of witness vulnerability. The present message is that if you want to preserve your life expectancy, don’t act as a witness in a criminal prosecution for killing. Witnesses are systematically intimidated and harassed. In a relatively poor society, in which there is heavy dependence on community and very limited real geographical mobility, witnesses are uniquely vulnerable when the forces accused of killings are all too often those, or are linked to those, who are charged with ensuring their security. The WPP is impressive – on paper. In practice, however, it is deeply flawed and would seem only to be truly effective in a very limited number of cases. The result, as one expert suggested to me, is that 8 out of 10 strong cases, or 80% fail to move from the initial investigation to the actual prosecution stage. (e) Acceptance of the need to provide legitimate political space for leftist groupsAt the national level, there has been a definitive abandonment of President Ramos’ strategy of reconciliation.  This might be termed the Sinn Fein strategy. It involves the creation of an opening — the party-list system — for leftist groups to enter the democratic political system, while at the same time acknowledging that some of those groups remain very sympathetic to the armed struggle being waged by illegal groups (the IRA in the Irish case, or the NPA in the Philippines case).  The goal is to provide an incentive for such groups to enter mainstream politics and to see that path as their best option.  

Neither the party-list system nor the repeal of the Anti-Subversion Act has been reversed by Congress.  But, the executive branch, openly and enthusiastically aided by the military, has worked resolutely to circumvent the spirit of these legislative decisions by trying to impede the work of the party-list groups and to put in question their right to operate freely. The idea is not to destroy the NPA but to eliminate organizations that support many of its goals and do not actively disown its means.  While non-violent in conception, there are cases in which it has, certainly at the local level, spilled over into decisions to extrajudicially execute those who cannot be reached by legal process. (f) Re-evaluate problematic aspects of counter-insurgency strategyThe increase in extrajudicial executions in recent years is attributable, at least in part, to a shift in counterinsurgency strategy that occurred in some areas, reflecting the considerable regional variation in the strategies employed, especially with respect to the civilian population.  In some areas, an appeal to hearts-and-minds is combined with an attempt to vilify left-leaning organizations and to intimidate leaders of such organizations.  In some instances, such intimidation escalates into extrajudicial execution.  This is a grave and serious problem and one which I intend to examine in detail in my final report. Conclusion The
Philippines remains an example to all of us in terms of the peaceful ending of martial law by the People’s Revolution, and the adoption of a Constitution reflecting a powerful commitment to ensure respect for human rights. The various measures ordered by the President in response to Melo constitute important first steps, but there is a huge amount that remains to be done.


Over 20 Million People “Stand Up Against Poverty” to set new Guinness World Record, announced on World Poverty Day

October 17 , 2006

(New York / London, 17 October 2006) Guinness World Records have officially verified that the  first ever world record has been set for the most number of people to Stand Up against poverty in multiple locations over 24 hours.

On 15-16 October, 23,542,614 people, in over eighty countries around the world set a new Guinness World Record for the largest number of people to “STAND UP AGAINST POVERTY”. The Stand Up record attempt, an initiative of the United Nations Millennium Campaign in partnership with the Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP) was set in time for the United Nations International Day for Poverty Eradication on 17 October.
 
Cricket fans in Jaipur, India; school children in Gaza and the Westbank; crowds at a concert in the Mbare slums, Zimbabwe and a huge gathering in Times Square New York all joined for the world record attempt. People stood together: at the foot of tallest hotel in the world in Dubai; in football stadiums across Spain and Mexico; in churches throughout Africa and schools all over the world including China.

At each event, people stood up and pledged their solidarity with the world’s poorest people and demanded that governments take urgent action to end poverty and inequality and to meet and exceed the Millennium Development Goals.
The UN Millennium Campaign’s Executive Coordinator Eveline Herfkens said:  “Together we have set an incredible record for the largest number of people standing up to demand action on poverty. But the record we really want to break is the world’s record of breaking promises and ignoring the poor. We don’t want to record numbers of people dying of poverty every year.  This is the great issue of our times, let us become great by dealing with it decisively.” 
In Johannesburg, Kumi Naidoo, spokesperson for the world’s largest anti-poverty coalition – the Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP) said: “Ordinary people around the world have stood up to express their passion to end poverty. Together, we have sent a clear message to our political leaders that we are going to keep pushing them to deliver on aid, on debt cancellation, on trade justice and to provide good and accountable governments. The people’s voices are growing louder. We will not rest until poverty is ended”.

United by the international symbol of the white band, the World Record number will be announced at events held at the United Nations in New York, London, Johannesburg, Milan and Nairobi today.
– Ends –

Media Contacts:
Millennium Campaign: Mandy Kibel +1 212 906 6242 mandy.kibel@undp.org
Anand Kantaria   +1 212 906 6783 anand.kantaria@undp.org
GCAP Sarah Jenkinson +44 7810 180237 or media@whiteband.org

For more information visit: www.standagainstpoverty.org OR www.whiteband.org

Notes to Editors and Producers:

1. Broadcast footage and photographs from “Stand Up Against Poverty” events around the world  available from:

For footage:  ftp.whitebandmedia.org
username: gcapftpdownload
password: dyrzx8gZ

ftp://undp:eedee38@ftp.standagainstpoverty.org//MEDIA

Broadcast material also available from Reuters and APTV

For photos visit: ftp://undp:eedee38@ftp.standagainstpoverty.org//MEDIA
www.box.net User name: Gcap Media 1 Password: Gcap Media 1
2. ‘Stand Up’ country highlights

• In Jaipur, India 38,000 cricket fans, with support from legendary batsman, Sachin Tendulkar, ‘stood up’ at the start of the India vs England match.
• In the US, United Nations Deputy Secretary General Mark Malloch Brown, Queen Noor of Jordan and HH Swami Ramdev ‘stood up’ with thousands in Times Square, New York.
• Hundreds of thousands stood together for one minute at an anti-poverty music concert in Mbare slums in the capital, Harare, Zimbabwe.
• School children across Lebanon, Jordan, Gaza and Westbank ‘stood up’ together to highlight the injustice that not all children can afford to go to school.
• Organisers in Bangladesh have reported figures of over half a million young people who stood united in gigantic white human chains across across 64 districts of the country.
• Malawi’s President, Dr Bingu wa Mutharika joined thousands at a rally against poverty in the capital.
• In the Philippines, president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo “Stood Up” and vowed to stamp out poverty.
• In Mexico, several hundred thousand people stood up at football matches lead by 9 Football Clubs

Visit www.standagainstpoverty.org or www.whiteband.org for full list of events from around the world
3. OFFICIAL Guinness Verification text

“ The world record for the most people to ‘Stand Up Against Poverty’ in 24 hours was set on 15 – 16 October 2006 for the United Nation’s Millennium Campaign and involved a massive total of 23,542,614 participants in 11,646 events around the globe.”

4.  The Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP) is a coalition of anti-poverty and economic justice campaigns. GCAP brings together a diverse group of organisations united in the knowledge that we will be more effective when we work together.

We want to pressure governments to eradicate poverty, dramatically lessen inequality, and achieve the Millennium Development Goals. We are demanding:
a.    Public accountability, just governance and the fulfilment of human rights
b.    Trade justice
c.    A major increase in the quantity and quality of aid and financing for development
d.    Debt cancellation

Since it launched at the World Social Forum in January 2005 GCAP has mobilised more than 38 million citizens. Faith groups, women’s groups, trade unions, youth organisations, international NGOs, grassroots movements and numerous other civil society groups for the backbone of the national campaigns whose symbol is the is the white band.

5. United Nations Millennium Campaign

The UN Millennium Campaign supports citizens’ efforts to hold their governments to account for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals.

6. To find out more about Stand Up Against Poverty visit www.whiteband.org and www.standagainstpoverty.org


RP joining global UN anti-poverty event

October 14 , 2006

THE United Nations Information Center (UNIC) and UN Resident Coordinator’s Office in the Philippines, in coordination with the Geneva-based UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), will launch the World Investment Report 2006 (WIR06) at the MCF Hall of the Marikina City Hall on Monday.

The UNCTAD’s flagship publication, the WIR06 “highlights the changing role of developing countries and transition economies in global foreign direct investment and the international production system” and “examines their emergence as significant sources of foreign direct investment as well as the underlying factors and broader implications,” a UNIC press statement said.

The launch of the report coincides with the second day of the Philippines’ participation in the UN-sponsored Millennium Development Goals (MDG) Festival, Stand Up, which the UNIC described as a “global advocacy effort to have the greatest number of people ever to stand up against poverty and for the MDGs” and is part of the observance of UN months this October.

“Within a 24-hour period, people from all over the globe will physically and symbolically stand up to communicate their desire to fight poverty,” the UNIC said. “This is also expected to set an official Guinness World Record.”

The MDGs are a set of eight targets intended to “halve extreme poverty by 2015,” the UNIC said.

These goals are: the eradication of extreme poverty and hunger; achieving universal primary education; promoting gender equality and empowering women; reducing child mortality; improving material health; combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases; ensuring environmental sustainability; and developing global partnerships for development.

The Philippine campaign, named “Tumayo Tayo: Labanan ang Kahirapan, Tuparin ang MDGs” (Let us Stand: Fight Poverty, Accomplish the MDGs), runs from 6 p.m. on October 15, Sunday, to 6 p.m. the next day at the Freedom Park of Marikina City.

Activities include a rock concert from 4 to 9 p.m. Sunday and a day-long fair on Monday that will feature exhibits, film showings and performance by various artists.

Also on Monday, “Tumayo Tayo Moments” organized by the National Commission for Culture and Arts will be observed during simultaneous flag-raising ceremonies in Malacañang — to be led by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo — government agencies and schools.

Tumayo Tayo events will also be held in different regions and provinces, including Baguio City, Los Baños, Laguna, Sultan Kudarat, Tawi-Tawi and Sulu.

Those who wish to participate in Tumayo Tayo events can register their organizations at www.millenniumcampaign.ph.
 
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Globe BridgeCom sa Bayan Project

May 29 , 2006

Recently Globe Telecom, in partnership with ABS-CBN Bayan Foundation and Task Force Davao conducted a farming and vegetable production and livelihood training for the Marilog, Paquibato and Baguio districts of Davao City.

Dubbed as Globe BridgeCom sa Bayan Sustainable Livelihood for Barangays, the program aims to help empower communities in maximizing their local resources and skills to develop their own communities.

Ms. Nileema Noble, UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative, participated in a panel discussion during the lanching of Globe BridgeCom sa Bayan project. In order to help achieve the Millennium Development Goals, she highlighted the role of the private sector in unleashing the power of local entrepreneurs by using the company’s managerial, organizational, technological innnovation to improve the lives of the poor.

The project aims to provide local community leaders training on entepreneurship and mico-credit financing in selected barangays. Now on its second year, the project is being implemented in partnership with Globe Telecom and ABS-CBN Bayan Foundation.

Other members of the panel discussion included Mr. Gerardo Ablaza, Jr., President, Globe Telecom, Ms. Gina Lopez, Vice Chairperson, ABS-CBN Bayan Foundation, Ms. Imelda Madarang, Executive Director, Philippine Center for Entrepreneurship, and Mr. Ed Morato, Jr., President, ABS-CBN Bayan Foundation.
 


31st UNESCO ITI Theater Olympics Of The Nations

May 22 , 2006

UN Resident Coordinator Ms. Nileema Noble graced the closing ceremonies at the Manila Hotel Centennial Hall and delivered the key message on behalf of the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.

She was welcomed by Ms. Jeniffer Walpole, Secreatry General of ITI, Ms. Cecile Guidote-Alvarez, Executive Director, National Commission for Culture and Arts, and Ambassador Preciosa Soliven, Secretary General of the UNESCO National Commission of the Philippines.

For one week, international and national theater luminaries from 90 countries participated in the 31st UNESCO – International Theater Institute (ITI) World Congress and Theater Olympics of Nations with the theme “Ancestral Roots to New Artistic Routes of Expression: Mobilizing Cultural Diversity to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals.”

For the first time in the country, theater enthusiasts were treated to an array of cultural plays from around the world at the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP).