Marcos urged by Aussie senators to stop human rights violations in PHL

Marcos urged by Aussie senators to stop human rights violations in PHL

AUSTRALIAN senators on Thursday hit President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. for continued human rights violations in the Philippines.

Greens Party Senator Janet Rice, who was present during Mr. Marcos’ speech before the Australian Parliament in Canberra, pulled out a placard that read: “Stop the human rights abuses.”

Ms. Rice, who was escorted out of the building, said it was a shame that the government of Mr. Albanese, a Labor politician, invited the Philippine leader despite human rights violations and persistent corruption in the Philippines.

“Under President Marcos, corruption in the Philippines is getting worse,” she said in an X post. “There are hundreds of political prisoners, and anti-terrorism laws are used as legal cover for extrajudicial killings.”

The Presidential Communications Office did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment.

Ms. Rice said it’s shocking that Labor and Liberal senators “would rather censure me than call out President Marcos’ lethal regime.” “They must do better to represent Australia’s values.”

The Australian Greens Party is the “most powerful third force” in Australian politics, holding 11 of 76 seats in the Senate.

Other Green senators including Jordon Steele-John, David Shoebridge and Barbara Pocock boycotted Mr. Marcos by holding protests outside.

“The Parliament is once more being used to launder the political reputation of those involved in serious human rights abuses,” Mr. Shoebridge said in a post on X. “This time it is Bongbong Marcos, president of the Philippines.”

“The deep, cruel legacy of the Marcos regimes — senior and junior — have crushed community, peasant, women’s, trade union and human rights activists in the Philippines,” he said. “We marked this legacy today as he visited Parliament.”

Mr. Marcos took office in 2022, more than 30 years after his late dictator-father was ousted by a popular street uprising in February 1986.

Human Rights Watch said rights violations in the Philippines remain rampant even as the country is now out of the hands of Rodrigo R. Duterte, whose war on drugs killed thousands.

“Drug-related killings implicating the police have continued under Marcos, if at a lower rate,” according to the group, adding that the Marcos government refuses to cooperate with the International Criminal Court’s investigation of the war on drugs.”

“Arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings of activists and human rights defenders persist,” it said, adding that the Philippine state continues the practice of branding activists and politicians as communists.

Emy Gasendo, a Filipino-Australian academic at the Australian National University, said Filipinos traveled from as far away as Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney to join the protest outside the Parliament in Canberra. 

“Some drove as early as midnight,” he said in an e-mail.

Rommel Yamzon, secretary-general of Philippine-based rights group I-Defend, said the government has yet to deliver its promise to the United Nations (UN) Joint Program, which was started by the UN Human Rights Council to address human rights abuses.

“Concrete resolutions aimed at strengthening domestic investigative and accountability mechanisms, improving data gathering on alleged police violations and their impacts on addressing systemic issues of impunity remain deficient,” he said via Messenger chat.

Human rights group Karapatan called on the Australian people “to continue to support calls for justice and to hold Marcos accountable for the dire human rights situation in the Philippines.”

“The continuing human rights and international humanitarian law violations under Marcos, the prevalent climate of impunity and the Marcos family’s history of plunder and rights violations during Marcos Sr.’s dictatorship are more than enough reasons why the Australian people should denounce this regime,” Karapatan Secretary-General Cristina Palabay said via Messenger chat.

Mr. Albanese assumed his post as prime minister in 2022, ending nine years of conservative rule. He had committed to human rights reforms during the campaign.

Human Rights Watch said Australia should be concerned over the “rising harassment and violence against labor leaders and union organizers in the Philippines.”

The University of the Philippines Third World Studies Center’s Dahas project earlier noted that a year into Bongbong’s term, 342 people were killed by state agents in connection with illegal drugs.

Earlier this month, Dahas said at least 28 people were killed in the anti-narcotics campaign in January.

“Albanese should urge Marcos to act to stop these abuses and thoroughly investigate recent killings,” Human Rights Watch said. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza