The Philippines said Thursday its human rights record "can
stand up" to global scrutiny amid reports the US government
may hold back on military assistance.
Ricardo Blancaflor, who was named as head of a recently created
task force to solve political killings, said the Philippines
only suffered from bad perceptions carried by the media.
"Our human rights record can stand up to the rest of the
world," Blancaflor said on local television.
He said he hoped US legislators would not apply "double
standards" in approving military aid for the Philippines,
stressing that Manila was closely following cases of human rights
abuses and political killings.
Blancaflor noted that Manila did not attach conditions when
Washington requested a Philippine contingent to serve in the
Iraq war.
"We did not tell the Americans, 'You know we're going to
join you in Iraq provided you don't do what you are doing in
Guantanamo Bay or in Abu Ghraib prison," Blancaflor said,
referring to US detention centres in Cuba and Iraq where human
rights abuses against detainees have been documented.
Blancaflor's comments came after news reports that US legislators
had agreed to slightly increase military funding for Manila from
29.7 million dollars this year to 30 million dollars in 2008.
But part of the increase was contingent on the Philippines improving
its rights record.
US special envoy Philip Alston earlier this month released a
damning report blaming the Philippine military for many unsolved
killings.
His report said soldiers were "systematically hunting down" leaders
of left-wing groups as part of its anti-insurgency campaign.
Among those killed, he said, were judges, lawyers, anti-government
activists, trade union activists and journalists.
Local rights group Kaparatan said the number of extra-judicial
killings had dropped to 68 this year from 209 in 2006. It added
that since President Gloria Arroyo came to power in January 2001
up to October this year, a total of 887 killings were reported.
Blancaflor defended the military,
saying they were the only defense organization in the world where
officers can only be promoted if cleared by a human rights office.
"We don't deserve this kind of reputation. We have to attack
this perception that aid is being withheld because we are violating
human rights," he said.
Like we said before, when an official
gets up spouting smooth words, etc. you can bet the real truth
is exactly the opposite.
Blancaflor is just one of many liars, front
men, etc. for the death squads roaming the country while the
local police fleece the foreigners.
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