CHR probes pregnant rebels’ alleged abduction

The Having police colonels and generals tender courtesy resignations in an attempt to weed out officials allegedly involved in the illegal drug trade is only a first step, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) reminded the Philippine National Police (PNP) on Friday. on Human Rights (CHR) is wishing that 2023 will be a year of lasting peace and justice for Filipinos, assuring the public that the agency's mandate remains the same despite the changes that happened over the previous years.

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The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) on Thursday said it would investigate allegations that the military had abducted two pregnant rebels in possible violation of international humanitarian law. In a statement, CHR Chair Richard Palpal-latoc said they had already tasked the CHR Caraga to investigate reports that Aurily Havana and Jennifer Binungkasan, both fighters under the New Peoples’ Army, were taken by members of the 402nd Infantry Brigade on Nov. 3. Havana, 23, and Binungkasan, 19, have yet to surface since. While it maintained its stance against armed conflict, the CHR reminded the government that enforced disappearances were a serious human rights violation. “As we continue to seek a more durable solution in achieving peace, respect for human rights is a constant, nonnegotiable value that all sides—government and rebels alike—should always uphold,” it said. —KRIXIA SUBINGSUBING

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