NGO to bring GMA rights cases before UN body
| By Michaela P. del Callar 05/28/2010 A group of local non-government organizations (NGOs)  will bring the case of the alleged unlawful detention of medical  workers, dubbed the “Morong 43,” and other human rights violations  committed by the government of President Arroyo before the United  Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva. The  Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines will  send a five-man delegation to attend the 14th Session of the UNHRC in  Switzerland, to be held on May 31-June 18.  The  Philippines is presently a member of the UNHRC. “As  the curtain falls on President Arroyo’s nine-year rule, it is most  certain that among others, it shall be marked as the worst in terms of  adherence to human rights instrumentalities. With the implementation of  Oplan Bantay Laya, the most vicious counterinsurgency program in recent  memory, her government tops the scale of human rights violators in the  country’s history since the martial law years,” Fr. Rex Reyes, Jr.,  secretary general of the National Council of Churches in the Philippines  and head of delegation to Geneva, said. Joining  Reyes to the UN are Marie Hilao Enriquez, chairman of the human rights  alliance, Karapatan, Atty. Edre Olalia, acting secretary general of the  National Union of People’s Lawyers, Atty. Carlos Zarate, secretary  general of the Union of People’s Lawyers in Mindanao, and Roneo Clamor,  deputy secretary general of Karapatan. The 43  health workers or the Morong 43 were arrested last February 6 by  military and police forces due to suspicion of their being members of  the local communist rebel group.  Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/nation/20100528nat2.html | 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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