TEN months after the abduction of her son
Jonas, Edith Burgos began a seven-city speaking tour in the US
on Saturday to bring to Americans and Filipino-Americans her
plight and those of other victims of human rights abuses under
the Arroyo administration.
Burgos, widow of Malaya founding publisher
and press freedom icon Joe Burgos, started her speaking tour in
New York Saturday night (Sunday afternoon in Manila) in a
benefit dinner sponsored by the NY Committee on Human Rights in
the Philippines (NYCHRP).
While in New York, Mrs. Burgos is also set to
hold a private meeting with UN special rapporteur Philip Alston
whose report on his 2007 visit to the Philippines tagged the
Armed Forces as perpetrator of most of the extrajudicial
executions alleged by human rights watchdogs.
"We are concerned that not enough is being
done for Jonas' case by the Philippine government," said Jamie
Mapa, NYCHRP member and first cousin of Jonas. "We have a moral
responsibility to seek justice for the victims of human rights
violations in our motherland."
Jonas, an agriculture graduate, was abducted
on April 28 last year allegedly by soldiers. Prior to his
abduction, Jonas was providing organic farming training to
peasants affiliated with the Alyansang Magbubukid ng Gitnang
Luzon.
The Burgos family is holding the military
responsible as one of the vehicles used by Jonas' abductors had
a license plate that was originally attached to a vehicle
impounded at the camp of the Army's 56th Infantry Battalion in
Bulacan since June 2006.
After New York, Mrs. Burgos' next stop is
Washington DC where she will speak at the annual Ecumenical
Action Days spearheaded by Christian churches and denominations.
"Mrs. Burgos' sharing of her plight in
searching for her son will put a human face on the issue of
political repression for the broad US public and help us
strengthen our efforts to cut US aid to the illegitimate Arroyo
regime," said coordinator Katrina Abarcar of GMA Watch, which
sponsored the tour.
Abarcar said the tour "seeks to raise
awareness about the human rights, political and economic crises
that Filipinos are currently facing under Arroyo's
administration. Our hope is that our efforts will mobilize US
taxpayers to demand that our tax dollars stop supporting
bloodshed in the Philippines."
GMA Watch is a Filipino-American advocacy
network that is actively participating in Church-led lobbying
efforts to hold the Arroyo accountable for alleged widespread
violations of human rights.
The lobby efforts and the resulting backlash
among members of the US Congress have resulted in the
introduction of "restrictive language" or preconditions to US
military aid to the Philippines in 2008.
In her tour, Burgos will be speaking on
behalf of the Desaparecidos, a national organization of families
of victims of forced disappearances.
Mervyn Toquero, a representative of the
National Council of Churches in the Philippines, is also joining
Burgos and her daughter Virginia Ann.
Mrs. Burgos has appealed her son's case before the Supreme
Court and the Court of Appeals through petitions for the writs
of habeas corpus and amparo. - Anthony Ian Cruz