The US Senate hearing

on the extrajudical killings in the Philippines;

Support from the Ecumenical Voice for Peace

and Human Rights in the Philippines

 

 

March 14, 2007

 

 

 

The Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines which is a delegation of Roman Catholic and Protestant bishops and clergy, Christian and Muslim human rights defenders all working for the defense and promotion of human rights, marched to the Philippine Embassy in Washington DC and staged a picket rally. Later it held a Worship Service in front of the National City Christian Church, 5 Thomas Circle, N.W. Washington, DC.

 

 

Senator Barbara Boxer listens to the testimony of Marie Hilao-Enriquez on the political killings in the Philippines

 

Opening statement of Sen. Barbara Boxer, Chairman, Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affiars (zipped, 3 scanned pages)

Statement of  Eric G. John, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs (zipped, 6 scannged pages)

 

   

 

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Photos courtesy of:

J.Melegrito, BAYAN-USA and Suara Bangsa Moro Partylist

           

US Senate hearing on the political killings in the Philippines

           

 

Testimony of Amnesty International USA on RP killings

Boxer, Amnesty Int'l Slam Malacanang in US Hearings on Killings

Statement of Suara Bangsamoro Partylist on the US Senate hearing

Click here for the audio of the proceedings

 

 

The jampacked hearing room at the Dirksen Building drew representatives from religious and human rights organizations, labor unions, Filipino American community groups, and civil rights advocates.

 

 

Bishop Elizer M. Pascua, General Secretary, United Church of Christ in the Philippines, testifies before the U.S. Senate sub-committee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs, along with Marie Hilao-Enriquez, Secretary General of KARAPATAN, and G. Eugene Martin (right), Exec. Director of the Philippine Facilitation Project, U.S. Institute for Peace.

 

 

Invited to testify at the US Senate hearing were the following: Mr. Eric G John, Deputy Assistant Secretary for East ASian and Pacific Affairs, Department of State; Mr. Jonathan D. Farrar, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, Department of State; Mr. T. Kumar, Advocacy Director for Asia and the Pacific, Amnesty International USA; Mr. Eugene Martin, Executive Director, Philippine Facilitation Project US Institute of Peace, Washington DC; Ms. Sharon Rose Duremdez, Secretary-General, NAtional Council of Churches in the Philippines; Bp. Eliezer Pascua, General Secretary, United Church of Christ in the Philippines,  and, Ms. Marie Hilao-Enriquez, General Secretary of KARAPATAN, Quezon City, Philippines; and others.

 

           
           

 

Report on the US Senate Hearing

by the Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights

in the Philippines

 

We are the Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines, a delegation of Roman Catholic and Protestant bishops and clergy, Christian and Muslim human rights defenders all working for the defense and promotion of human rights in our country.

 

Our church partners, countrymen and women and overseas friends in the US have raised deep concern over the human rights crisis in the Philippines. They have invited us to visit the United States to talk with ecumenical leaders, legislators, government officials, faith communities in the hope of deepening their awareness about the extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances and other forms of political repression obtaining in our country today.

 

Taking off from the testimonies and the documentation we presented, our partners spoke to some members of the Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs of the Foreign Relation Committee of the Senate and the Foreign Relations Committee of the House of Representatives.

 

They asked for a review of the policies on development and military assistance of the George Bush administration as to whether such policies exacerbate instead of reduce social and economic inequities or aggravate rather than stop the prevalent violations of human rights.

 

We believe that the alarming spate of killings under the present dispensation in the Philippines must be raised internationally because the government is required to comply with its obligations under international law and rescind its national security program which has the effect of legitimizing the killing of innocent civilians.

 

We had briefings in the State Department, and the House of Representatives, but you are most interested in the Senate hearing conducted on March 14, at 2:30pm (Washington time).

 

The Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee heard the following testimonies:

 

Mr Eric G. John, Deputy Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs of the Department of State

Mr Jonathan Farrar, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor

Mr. T. Kumar, advocacy director for Asia and the Pacific, Amnesty International USA

Mr. G. Eugene Martin, Executive Director, Philippine Facilitation Project US Institute of Peace

Bishop Eliezer Pascua, general secretary of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines, and

Ms. Marie Hilao-Enriquez, General Secretary of KARAPATAN.

 

Senator Boxer opened the hearing by quoting heavily from the Alston press statement.

 

She accepted the 1st 3 calls submitted by the delegation through Bsp Pascua; commended these by saying “ these hit it right on the head” and actually asked him to repeat the calls for the record.

 

She admonished the Philippine government for sending military and police officials to the hearing and did not allow them to enter the hearing; said “you do not send military and police officials to intimidate the witnesses

 

She also said that given the large military assistance to the Philippines, these should not be used for extrajudicial killing but instead “we should tie some strings around military aid”. Also mentioned that her constituents are complaining about the use of government funds to kill people in the Philippines. “It is important that we don’t have blood in our hands,” she said.

 

She also mentioned we do not want to train the to kill their own people or commit human rights violations after the Deputy Assistant Secretary Eric John mentioned that the US State Department has been providing training to Philippine soldiers

 

Aside from the above opinions, she stated the following:

1)     

      ►    That it would be good if international observers could go to the next elections in the Philippines after G. Eugene Martin said that there is an expected upsurge in election related violence

2)      That this is not the 1st hearing on the human rights situation in the Philippines but will could be followed by a series of such hearings

3)      Thanked Bsp Pascua and Marie Enriquez for coming forward and appearing before the subcommittee given the dangers involved

 

Of particular interest was the statement of G. Eugene Martin that: “Candidates from left-wing political parties will be particular targets. National Security adviser Norberto Gonzalez stated on March  8 that such candidates must not be allowed to win seats in the congress. The Gonzales view that party-list candidates ‘are under the direct influence of the communist party’ gives a potential hunting license to military and local officials who agree with him.

 

The hearing was also attended by Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-Ak) and Senator James Webb (D-Va).

 

Download report in Word Format

 

March of Church People to the Philippine Embassy

in Washington D.C.

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
           
     

Summary of Calls by the Ecumenical Voice on Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines, Washington D.C., USA, 11 March 2007

 

Ecumenical Conference Statement: Response to "Let the Stones Cry Out (zipped, 3 pages, scanned)"

 

"Let the stones cry out" - NCCP document on political killings

           

Worship Service in front of the National City Christian Church

5 Thomas Circle, N.W. Washington, DC

           
     
           
     
           
           

Statements and News Features

           

 

Inquirer - AI urges Bush to stop military aid to RP

Inquirer - Church group scores gov’t for summary killings

Inquirer - "Ocampo participating in US probe of slays’ -- Bayan Muna

 

Inquirer - US raps Arroyo on political killings

Agence France-Presse - US seeks tougher RP action to stop extrajudicial killings

Examiner - Philippine murders must be stopped

 

           
           

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