UN execs grateful to Cordi support vs DOJ terrorist tag
>> Monday, January 21, 2019
BAGUIO CITY – Two
indigenous experts officials of the United Nations, who are natives of the
Cordillera, expressed their gratitude to local governments in the region that
passed resolutions that denounced the terrorist tag against them by the justice
department.
UN Special
Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Victoria Tauli-Corpuz and Joan
Carling, former indigenous expert member of the UN Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues, visited members of the local legislative body during their
regular session Jan. 7 to personally express their gratitude to the support of
the local government and the people against the terrorist tag on them by the
justice department.
Earlier, a
Manila-based court dismissed the terrorist tag imposed on Tauli and human
rights lawyer Jose Molintas for lack of probable cause while Carling and other
Cordillerans who were included in the terrorist tag filed a similar motion for
the dismissal of the same on the same grounds.
“The support
shown by the local government and other local governments in the region, like
Sagada and Mountain Province, only shows the importance of the communities
where we come from in vouching for our integrity and credibility as responsible
citizens. It also shows that people who are being maligned could seek the help
of the communities where they come from for the needed support to negate false
accusations hurled against them,” Corpuz said.
Previously,
seven Cordillerans, including Tauli and Carling, were included in the alleged
terrorist list released by the justice department for reportedly being staunch
allies of the Communist Party of the Philippines–New People’s Army because the
groups they previously belonged to were linked with the communist movement.
However, the
local governments of Baguio, Sagada town and
Mountain Province provincial governments passed separate resolutions
that denounced the terrorist tag against the seven Cordillerans, claiming that
those who were included in the government’s questionable terrorist list wee
merely human rights and indigenous peoples rights advocates who had been
working with the mainstream society over the past several decades.
The passed
resolutions denouncing the terrorist take against the seven Cordillerans were
transmitted to the justice department for the government’s information,
guidance and further action and for the eventual removal of the terrorist tag
against the natives of the Cordillera who were included in the controversial
terrorist list.
Carling also
expressed gratitude to local officials of Baguio, Sagada and Mountain Province
for having stood behind them when they were unjustly tagged as terrorists by
the justice department, saying that it is heart-warming to know that local
officials and the Cordillerans are concerned about the welfare of their
colleagues who are being maligned by the government that is supposed to protect
them through the use of its vast resources.
Both UN
experts urged the local legislatures in the different parts of the region to
sustain what they are doing in fighting for the rights of the people who are
being unjustly treated to prevent the occurrence of similar incidents that
might affect the integrity and credibility of innocent individuals who are
being tagged as terrorists. -- Dexter A. See
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