Delegation decries human rights violations
A delegation from the California-Nevada Annual (regional)
Conference attends a service at the Cavite prison in the Philippines
during a trip to learn about human
rights violations in the country. UMNS photos by Laddie Perez-Galang. |
A UMNS Report
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
July 25, 2008
Killings and abductions in the Philippines "continue without let-up,"
according to a United Methodist delegation from the U.S. that recently
visited the country.
The visit was the second time a delegation from The United Methodist
Church's California-Nevada Annual (regional) Conference has traveled to
the Philippines to hear about human rights violations, which have been
ongoing since 2001. The conference's first visit in February 2007 led to
a meeting with U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer in which the group advocated for
a U.S. inquiry into the issue.
The children's choir of the United Methodist Church of
Barangay Conversion in Nueva Ecija performs for the delegation.
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Eighteen delegates, including seven young adults, traveled to three
regions of the country June 24-July 7. The California-Nevada Conference
has sent more than $12,000 to the Philippines to support families of
victims of human rights violations.
Karapatan, a human rights group in the Philippines that tracks the
violations, reports that from Jan. 21, 2001, to March 31, 2008, 903
people have been victims of extrajudicial killings. The government of
President Gloria Arroyo has been criticized for its inaction and for
possible ties to groups carrying out the extrajudicial killings. In that
same time period, 193 people have "disappeared."
"We heard from victims and survivors, human rights advocates, and a
variety of persons from these militarized communities," said the Rev.
Michael Yoshii, co-chairperson of the delegation and pastor of Buena
Vista (Calif.) United Methodist Church. "The testimonies of the people,
and what we witnessed helped us in drawing this conclusion: The impunity
of human rights violations under the present administration continues
without let-up."
The National Council on Churches in the Philippines hosted the group and
took the delegation to Guihulnga, Negros Oriental; Pananuman, Abra; and
Nueva Ecija. The group also met with victims and survivors at the NCCP
office in Manila.
'I am them too!'
Laddie Perez-Galang, a member of South Hayward (Calif.) United Methodist Church, led the group that went to Nueva Ecija.
Delegates visit Judge Ruben Reyes,
a member of the denomination's
Judicial Council.
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The group met with two brothers in Pantabanga whose parents, United
Methodist lay leaders, were tortured and forced to commit suicide.
"They were given two choices: their lives or the lives of their
children," she said. "They already lost one of their older sons in a
massacre that happened earlier. We were informed that there were other
forced suicides in that area."
Perez-Galang lived in the Philippines until 1974 and was 13 when she
left with her parents. She was also part of the first delegation that
visited in 2007.
"I thought I was prepared and ready to actually see with my own eyes
what I was reading and hearing about what is going on in the
Philippines," she said. "When we talked with the survivors and families
of the victims, I felt their pain, their sorrows, their anger. I am them
too!"
Victims speak out
Edith Burgos told the group her son, Jonas, was abducted and has been
missing for more than a year. Jonas was an organizer among the poor
farmers and fishers. The Rev. Melchor Abesamis, a student at Union
Theological Seminary, was abducted, tortured and imprisoned for a litany
of offenses. He was released and shared his story with the delegation
for the first time in public.
Some of the delegation members visited a village recently occupied by AFP forces.
"At the village we were shown the empty bomb casings left behind after a
monthlong intensive bombing raid," Yoshii said. "While there were no
physical casualties as a result of the military activities, the daily
bombing left the villagers in trauma, shock and disbelief that their
homes could be taken over by their own military forces."
The delegation's young adults attend
an ecumenical youth fellowship.
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The group also visited a United Church of Christ pastor, the Rev. Berlin
Guerrero, in the Cavite prison where he has been under arrest on
charges of murder since May 27, 2007. He was abducted in front of his
wife and three children and has been subjected to torture. Guerrero has
maintained his innocence and said he has been a target of the state.
Guerrero has begun a prison ministry providing worship services and
Bible studies, and he has organized a choir, Yoshii said. Mylene
Guerrero, his wife, has been trying to get a visa to go to the United
States for a speaking tour with Bishop Eliezar Pascua, but so far she
has been unsuccessful.
"We told her that in spite of not making the trip to the U.S., her
husband's case was becoming well known just through her attempt to
visit," Yoshii said.
Perez-Galang said the group was told many fact-finding teams had come to the country but nothing had changed.
"They asked, 'What's the difference between them and us?'" she said. "We
told them we made a commitment and a promise to the survivors, families
of victims, human rights advocates and workers that we will tell their
stories to our church members, our congressional leaders and
representatives and everybody."
*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
Related Article
Philippines: Faith and Justice
Resources
California-Nevada Annual Conference
Philippines: Mercy and Mission
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