CASES OF TRILLANES AND FOUR PARTY-LIST CONGRESSMEN TAKEN UP AT IPU ASSEMBLY
The continuing detention of Senator Antonio Trillanes and the “new acts of
harassment” against four party-list congressmen are now being looked into by
the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians (CHRP) of the
Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU).
This was reported by Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Q. Pimentel, Jr. (PDP-Laban),
a member of the five-man CHRP during the 118th IPU Assembly held in Cape
Town, South Africa from April 13 to 18.
Trillanes has been barred by the authorities form attending Senate sessions
and other activities while undergoing court trial for rebellion and coup
d’etat charges in connection with the July 27, 2003 ‘Oakwood Mutiny’ and the
Nov. 29, 2007 ‘Siege of the Manila Peninsula Hotel’ in Makati City.
Also, fresh murder charges have been filed by the government against
Representatives Satur Ocampo and Teodoro Casino of Bayan Muna Representative
Liza Maza of Gabriela and former Representative Rafael Mariano of Anak-Pawis
for their alleged involvement in the killing of three ex-communist rebels
between 2001 and 2004.
The accused lawmakers said the new charges against them were allegedly
fabricated as part of the “continuing political persecution” by the Arroyo
administration. They said they were denied due process and called for the
dismissal of the charges.
Ocampo branded the new charges as the latest attempt by the administration
“to get us arrested, jailed, prosecuted and removed from the House of
Representatives.”
Pimentel said the CHRP is also keeping tabs of the murder case against
Representative Crispin Beltran of Anak-Pawis who was granted bail after
several months of detention.
In his 25-page report on his participation in the Cape Town IPU Assembly,
Pimentel said the human rights committee took preliminary action on the
cases of Trillanes and the party-list congressmen by calling on the
Philippine Senate and House of Representatives to exercise their duty in
upholding and protecting the rights of the said lawmakers.
Early last year, the IPU-CHRP sent a top-level delegation to the Philippines
to get first-hand information about the cases of Beltran and the other
representatives from the progressive party-list groups.
Pimentel said his work at the CHRP, which started on Sunday, April 13, and
ended on Friday, April 18, focused on the killings, ousters and other
harassments of parliamentarians the world over.
He reported that Burmese members of parliament in exile informed the
committee about recent oppressions perpetrated by ruling junta in Myanmar,
such as the arrest and detention of 17 parliamentarians during the
government crackdown on mass protests in the autumn of 2007. Six
parliamentarians died while in detention.
In response to the appeal of the Burmese parliamentarians, the committee
denounced the holding of a “farcical” referendum for a draft Constitution
and renewed the call for the release of all opposition leaders and activists
led by Aung San Syu Kyi.
Pimentel said the CHRP took up cases of violations of the rights in 17
countries, including the murder of seven parliamentarians and kidnapping or
death threats on nine others in Colombia, the murder of two parliamentarians
and illegal ouster of 56 parliamentarians in Ecuador, and the
arrest-detention of 38 Palestinian parliamentarians by the Israeli Army.
The veteran senator from Mindanao said that in his capacity as CHRP member
representing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations +3, he sponsored a
resolution congratulating Thailand and welcoming it back to the path of
democracy on its reinstatement as member of the IPU. Thailand was expelled
from the organization a few years back when military generals seized power
and imposed martial law. The resolution was unanimously approved during a
meeting of delegates from the ASEAN +3 countries.
During the IPU plenary session on April 13, Senate President Manuel Villar
delivered a speech in which he asked the advanced countries “to help those
that are perennially confronted with food shortage.”
Sen. Pia Cayetano was unanimously elected as the first Filipino (and the
first Asian) President of the Women Parliamentarians of the IPU.
“From reports of those who witnessed the proceedings that led to her
election, Sen. Pia Cayetano impressed her colleagues, not only with her
knowledge of women, children and gender issues but also, with the stand she
had taken to address violence against women and children and the problems
posed by and to our migrating professionals, especially women,” Pimentel
said.
For the record, Pimentel said that throughout his six-day stay in South
Africa, “I did not see a single lion, elephant, baboon or cobra.”
“All I saw were my hotel room, the conference room of the Committee on the
Human Rights of Parliamentarians, the session hall of the IPU at the
Convention Center of Cape Town, Africa and some dinner tables in eateries
out of the Convention Center,” he said.
“IPU conferences are a part of our international commitments like the UN or
the ILO. In my case, I have this special obligation to attend because ASEAN
+3 and the Asia Pacific Nations had elected me to be their representative to
the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians in the IPU Bali
Conference in 2007. My term as CHRP representative terminates when my term
as senator ends in 2010.”
Aside from Villar and Pimentel, the Senate delegation to the 118th IPU
Assembly also included Senate President Protempore Jinggoy Estrada, Majority
Leader Francis Pangilinan and Senators Pia Cayetano, Gregorio Honasan and
Alan Peter Cayetano.
Date: April 24, 2008
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