Lawyer group hopes for end of impunity under Duterte gov't | Inquirer News

Lawyer group hopes for end of impunity under Duterte gov’t

/ 03:10 PM June 30, 2016

President Rodrigo Roa Duterte meets with multi-sectoral groups at the Osmeña Room of the Kalayaan Hall in Malacañang after he takes oath as the next President of the Republic of the Philippines. MALACAÑANG POOL PHOTO

President Rodrigo Roa Duterte meets with multi-sectoral groups at the Osmeña Room of the Kalayaan Hall in Malacañang after he takes oath as the next President of the Republic of the Philippines. MALACAÑANG POOL PHOTO

An organization of human rights lawyers is hoping that people’s rights will be respected, the justice system will be accessible to the poor and impunity will end under the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte.

“We want individual and collective rights of the people to be respected,” Atty. Edre Olalia, secretary general of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL) said, adding that they are hoping that Duterte’s “checkered and unique” leadership will be the antithesis of the previous administration.

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Olalia said they are hoping that they will be “jobless” soon, spending less time defending human rights victims and dedicating their time nurturing rights and “reconstructing the wear and tear of so many ills and wrongs in society.”

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READ: Duterte vows to uphold all existing peace, int’l agreements

Human rights groups’ have been calling on the government to release the political prisoners.

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The previous administration denied the existence of political prisoners.

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Karapatan, however, said that as of March 2016, there are 543 political prisoners detained on false criminal charges. Of the 543, 18 are National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) peace consultants, whose protection under the GPH-NDFP agreement on safety and immunity guarantees, have been violated.

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There are also 88 ailing and 48 elderly among the political prisoners, mostly poor peasants fighting for their land rights.

“We wish there will be political prisoners  no more who face trumped up common crimes. We want a penology system to be humane. We wish an end to legal acrobatics that delay and frustrate justice for the poor and oppressed.  We wish no more disappearances, illegal arrests, torture, labelling, demolitions and discrimination of the underdog,” Olalia said.

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Duterte earlier promised an amnesty law that will grant freedom to political prisoners.

READ: FULL TEXT: President Rodrigo Duterte inauguration speech

In his inaugural speech, he also pledged to observe the rule of law and due process and called on the people for support and cooperation.

NUPL assured that they will cooperate “in bringing change in the corridors of power, in the streets, factories, farms, schools and communities, across the negotiating table and even in the countryside into the cities if need be.”

“Yet we will be ever watchful, vigilant and principled,” Olalia said. CDG/rga

READ: NDFP sees peace deal within 6-9 months of Duterte administration

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TAGS: due process, Human rights, Impunity, Justice, peace, poor, rule of law

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