EDITORIAL
COVER STORY
- A Precious Gift to Humanity
INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY
- The Other Side of the Kingdom
- Convention Now!
AFAD FEDEFAM
Together Now!
- Tying the Future with the Past
- Getting Back on Track
INTERNATIONAL LOBBY
- Still Fighting
- In Memory of the Disappeared
- The Power
of One
PHOTO ESSAY
- Protect All Persons From Enforced Disappearances
NEWS FEATURES
- Building on Nilo’s Legacy
- Filipinos Fight Against Disappearances
- Justice Suspended
- The Munir Murder
- Another Case of Impunity
STATEMENTS
/REPRINTS
- FEDEFAM Statement...
- An Open Statement to the GRP and NDFP Panels ...
- Parvez Imroz’ Award...
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
|
NEWS FEATURES: |
|
by Jennifer S. Pacursa |
|
Filipinos Fight Against Disappearances |
Slowly
but
(hopefully) surely. After more than ten years since House Bill 4959, the
anti-enforced disappearance bill, was introduced in Congress, it has moved
to the third or final reading in the House of Representatives on 1 June
2006. The 13th
Congress has finally provided a concrete development in this struggle of
families to define and penalize acts of involuntary disappearances.
The
International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced
Disappearances unanimously adopted by the United Nations Human Rights
Council considers this particular human rights violation to be the arrest,
detention, abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty committed
by agents of the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with the
authorization, support or acquiescence of the State, followed by the
refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the
fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which places such person
outside the protection of the law.
Vigilance
Despite the Philippine government’s then adamant stance
to support the adoption of the Convention, the unceasing campaign and
lobby work of the human rights community had paved the way for the
anti-disappearance bill to take shape and gain support from legislators in
the Lower House.
Born from the pain and grief caused by human rights
violations, the bill serves as the nation’s vigilance against future
administration’s dictatorial tendencies or oppressive governance. The
people now are careful not to let history repeat itself.
Moreover, following the dictatorship, the United
Nations Working Group recommended such legislation during its visit to the
country in 1991. It emphasized the need to narrow the powers of arrest,
strengthen the mandate of the Commission on Human Rights to make
unannounced detention, check visits, ensure the protection of witnesses
and the guarantee proper practice of habeas corpus.
HB 4959
This bill, once enacted into law, shall ensure the
prohibition of enforced disappearances. It shall protect the people’s
"right not to be disappeared" which shall not be suspended under any
circumstances, may it be a state of war or a threat of war, internal
political stability or any other public emergency.
Furthermore, the bill defines enforced disappearance as
a continuing crime so long as the victims have not surfaced or the
whereabouts remain unknown. It also guarantees that no order of any public
authority, civilian, military or others, may be used to justify an
involuntary disappearance.
Those charged of the crime of enforced disappearance as
well as those proved to be accomplices to the crime shall be sentenced to
reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment. Reclusion temporal
shall be meted upon those who attempted to commit the crime, or those who
profited from the act, or those who have knowledge of the crime and
concealed or destroyed evidences. More, charged perpetrators shall not
benefit from any special amnesty law that will exempt them from criminal
proceedings.
Passive Senate
This progress in the Lower House, however, is not
matched by positive developments in the Upper House. The Senate remains
unmoved by constant lobbying by non-government organizations and by
victims and families of the disappeared. Senators do affirm that enforced
disappearance is a crime against humanity and they recognize the existence
of disappearance cases. Yet they lack concrete actions. Their passiveness
continue to deny hundreds of families truth, justice and redress.
HRC member
The Philippines occupies a seat in the newly
constituted Human Rights Council (HRC). As a member, it holds much
responsibility in addressing issues of human rights in the country as well
as protecting these rights from abuses. Much pressure is placed upon the
government now as it has pledged to "continue to be sensitive to current
and emerging human rights challenges." Consequently, it is expected to
institutionalize the commitments it has made and further support other
human rights mechanisms, one of which is the said International Convention
for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances. This has
already been approved by consensus during the first session of the Human
Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland last June.
Take action
Set now against a backdrop of an environment where the
number of disappearance cases are increasing, the need for the bill’s
enactment into law has become even more urgent. New families have become
victims of this worst crime against humanity. Joining the rest of the
families of the victims of disappearances, they call upon the government
to take a positive action – uphold people’s rights and protect them. Enact
HB 4959. Support the Convention NOW!
|
The
Voice |
Vol. VI No.1 November 2006
|
|