BY ANTHONY IAN CRUZ
US SECRETARY of State Con-doleezza Rice
will testify on February 13 before the US Congress on whether
the Philippines has complied with human rights preconditions
tied to this year’s military aid to the country, said a group
of Filipino-Americans and Americans lobbying for sanctions
against the Arroyo administration.
The news came just two days after the
Philippines signed a $500,000 contract with Stuart Eizenstat
of the Covington & Burling LLP to push Philippine interests in
the US.
The Church-based Ecumenical Advocacy
Network (EAN) said it will "submit several preliminary
questions" for Sen. Barbara Boxer to pose to Rice on efforts
of the Philippine government to comply with the
recommendations of UN special rapporteur Philip Alston.
Alston, who visited the country last year
to look into the human rights situation, has said
extrajudicial killings in the country are distressingly high
and the military appeared to be responsible for a number of
them.
Boxer presided over a hearing of the Senate
foreign relations subcommittee on Asia Pacific affairs which
heard testimonies of Protestant bishop Eliezer Pascua and
Karapatan secretary general Marie Hilao Enriquez, and which
exposed before the US Congress the more than 800 extrajudicial
executions under the Arroyo administration.
Enriquez said she would ask Rice "to expose
the Arroyo government’s non-compliance with the
recommendations of the UN special rapporteur and other
conditions laid down by the US Congress."
"We will also point out that instead of
undertaking concrete measures to uphold human rights, to
prosecute the killers, and to stop the anti-human rights
military Operation Plan Bantay Laya, the Philippine government
has chosen to hire a PR and lobby outfit," she said.
According to EAN, Rice’s written report on
the compliance of the Philippines "may not be available soon
and may take months," thus delaying the US funding bonanza
which the group said is "being chomped at" by the Arroyo
administration even before it is made available to the
Philippines.
Presidential chief legal counsel Sergio
Apostol told media last December that the government should
confront the "leftist" lobby in the US, but Ambassador Willy
Gaa said the lobby contract signed Thursday in Washington
would prioritize the veterans issue.
The human rights preconditions tied to US
military aid to the Philippines placed the country alongside
Haiti, Guatemala, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Indonesia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ethiopia and Congo which
are widely perceived to be places where massive and widespread
human rights violations continue to occur.
The bill signed by President George W. Bush
last December 26 states that "Of the funds appropriated by
this Act under the heading `Foreign Military Financing
Program,’ not to exceed $30,000,000 may be made available for
assistance for the Philippines, of which $2,000,000 may only
be made available after the Secretary of State reports to the
Committees on Appropriations" on three human rights
preconditions: That the Arroyo government is implementing
Alston’s recommendations; that the Arroyo government is
implementing a policy of promoting military personnel who
respect human rights, and is investigating and prosecuting
military personnel and others who committed extrajudicial
executions or other human rights violations; and that the
Armed Forces is not engaging in acts of intimidation or
violence against members of legal organizations who advocate
for human rights."
Last year, EAN mobilized the heads of
various Protestant churches in the US, organized forums and
undertook a lobby that resulted in the first human rights
preconditions ever tied to US military aid to the Philippines
since the downfall of the Marcos dictatorship.