FOREIGN Secretary Alan Peter S. Cayetano lamented at the weekend that some of the Philippines’s friends in the diplomatic community have “politicized and weaponized” the human-rights issues in the country.
“Unfortunately, it seems our friends are really not interested in arriving at the truth and would rather rely on the misinformation being fed to them by parties that have politicized and weaponized human rights,” Cayetano said from New York.
The country’s top envoy particularly scored Iceland and several other mostly European countries for insisting on what he called their biased and unfounded criticism of Manila’s human-rights record.
“We regret that Iceland and several other countries maintained their position despite our offer for them to visit the Philippines and objectively asses the human-rights situation, especially at the community level,” Cayetano said.
The secretary, who is presiding over a command conference for Filipino diplomats from the Americas, said he even personally extended an invitation to Iceland Foreign Minister Gudlaugur Thor Thordarson to visit Manila to see for himself the human-rights situation in the country.
“Politics is politics but politicizing human rights endangers lives,” Cayetano said in the statement he issued after Iceland and several other countries, including the United Kingdom, Australia, and Finland, again criticized the Philippines at the general debate of the 38th Session of the Human Rights Council.
According to the Philippine Mission to the United Nations in Geneva, Iceland led 10 other members of the Council in signing the joint statement against the Philippines.
“This is a minority in the 47-member Human Rights Council,” according to Philippine Permanent Representative Evan Garcia who responded to the criticism by pointing to the rising xenophobia and anti-migrant sentiments in parts of Europe and elsewhere, including some of the countries that spoke against the Philippines.
“We are shocked by the persistent abusive and inhumane treatment of asylum seekers, refugees and migrants, whether legal or otherwise, their lack of inclusion in society and their oftentimes woefully limited access to all kinds of services,” Garcia said in response to the joint statement.
In exercising Manila’s right of reply during the general debate, Garcia cited numerous reports of exploitation of migrants under conditions of great vulnerability.
“We remind countries that have such severe shortcomings, including the United Kingdom and Australia, that the Philippines has preferred to engage with them in a positive manner, whether bilaterally or multilaterally,” Ambassador Garcia said, citing as examples the Global Forum for Migration and Development and in the ongoing negotiations for the Global Compact on Migration.
“This is in stark contrast with the needlessly confrontational attitude they have taken in [the Human Rights] Council,” Garcia added.
The Filipino envoy also noted that developing countries are hosting 80 percent of the world’s refugees today. “It is a shame for developed countries to keep their eyes shut to this growing concern,” he said.
“The Philippines, a developing country even with its more than 100 million population, has been doing its small part in sharing the global burden of the protection of refugees, asylum-seekers, stateless persons and other persons of concern,” Garcia pointed out.
“The Philippines remains a responsible member of this august body. We are respectful of our international human rights obligations. We remain a free, dynamic and democratic society. There is no basis, therefore, for the Council to be concerned with the situation in the Philippines,” Garcia added.