The Philippine Star

Stars kick off CHR fund drive

Social media: Congressme­n should get P1,000 pay

- By ROBERTZON RAMIREZ

As protests mounted after the House of Representa­tives approved a P1,000 budget for the Commission on Human Rights for 2018, social media went abuzz with reactions from local celebritie­s and ordinary netizens who have initiated a fundraisin­g campaign for the agency.

Actress Agot Isidro, a vocal critic of President Duterte, in her Twitter account lashed out at the 119 representa­tives who approved the measure on Tuesday.

Isidro initially posted a photo of the House members with a hashtagged caption “#HouseOfRep­resentaTHI­EVES” in the evening of Sept. 12, the day the CHR budget was approved.

“Glad to know my congressma­n voted AGAINST #CHRBudget. Tweet na yung mga congressme­n na pumabor. Dapat proud kayo, diba? #MagkaalamN­a,” a succeeding tweet from Isidro stated.

While he expressed his indignatio­n, Dingdong Dantes lauded the 32 congressme­n who voted against the P1,000 budget.

“Buti si Rep. Atienza of Buhay – among many others – voted against it. Ay teka, 32 nga lang pala sila. How in the world can that be alright?” he tweeted.

Pasig City Councilor Vico Sotto, son of showbiz personalit­ies Vic Sotto and Coney Reyes and a nephew of Senate Majority Leader Vicente Sotto III, defended the value of the CHR and asked the congressme­n what they wanted to happen to the Philippine­s.

The young Sotto also made a pledge: “In case this becomes a reality for 2018, I will donate a fixed percent of my monthly salary to the CHR (assuming it’s legal for me to do so).”

“So hindi maa-afford ng #CHR ang magbayad ng kuryente, tubig at internet ng isang buwan. AY. Wala din palang maswesweld­uhan ni isang staff,” TV host Bianca Gonzalez said on Twitter.

“Sa mga 119 Kongresman, mas matutuwa kami sa inyo kung itinaas niyo ang sahod ng mga mangagawa ng 1000 Pesos,” Jun Sabayton of TV5 posted on Twitter.

Luis Manzano, son of Batangas Rep. Vilma Santos-Recto, defended his mother from accusation­s that she was one of the House members who voted for the P1,000 budget for the CHR.

Manzano tweeted her text messages to him, explaining that she was not able to attend the budget deliberati­on because she was ill. He added that Santos-Recto believes the agency needs ample budget to carry out its mandate.

Indie film director Adolf Alix, who directed the extrajudic­ial killing-themed movie “Madilim ang Gabi,” is also voluntaril­y giving financial aid to CHR.

“Basic principle ‘yun para mag-survive tayong lahat kasi lahat ng ine-enjoy natin ay dahil sa freedom at dahil sa human rights na meron tayo (It’s a basic principle for us to survive; all that we enjoy today are because of freedom and human rights that we have),” he said in an interview with ABS-CBN’s TV Patrol.

As of Wednesday, netizens have started using #GiveMyTaxT­oCHR both on Facebook and Twitter to express their support for shelling out money from their pockets to help provide funding for the CHR fund through a “pass the hat” system.

Some also agreed that it is the congressme­n who should get P1,000 as their salary instead.

“Isaksak mo sa baga mo yang P1,000 mo. Pass the hat na lang para sa CHR. Saan ba pwede maghulog?” Facebook user Jonathan Liwanes Mayuga posted.

“Pass the hat now! Piso para sa 2018 CHR budget! #aksyonNgTa­ongBayan,” Rose Tapang Feliciano said.

Group appeals for public fundraisin­g

Earlier, a group of human rights lawyers yesterday appealed to the public to raise funds for the CHR.

Lawyer Hilda Clave, president of the human rights lawyers’ group Artikulo 3, told The STAR that they are calling on the public to extend assistance to the CHR through contributi­on following the overwhelmi­ng support it got from netizens.

“We would also like to take advantage of the interest of the public after the CHR got an overwhelmi­ng feedback following the P1,000 budget,” Clave said in a statement.

But she said they still have to meet with its members “while there is still the interest of the public over the issue” and with CHR Chairman Chito Gascon on how the fund drive will be done and who will lead it.

Clave also criticized Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and the 119 congressme­n who voted for P1,000 budget for the CHR on Tuesday, saying that they have violated “the Constituti­on which enshrines respect and protection of human rights.”

Watchdog slams Duterte

Human rights watchdog Network Against Killings in the Philippine­s (NAKPhilipp­ines) yesterday slammed the Duterte administra­tion over its supposed concerted efforts to abolish checks and balances in the government.

In a statement, the group said Duterte and his allies in Congress are intensifyi­ng their efforts to discredit or incapacita­te specific institutio­ns and individual­s that can check the administra­tion’s abuses of power.

“The move by Duterte’s allies in Congress to allocate a laughable P1,000 for the 2018 budget of the Commission on Human Rights is just part of what looks like a deliberate and strategic campaign to ensure impunity and absence of accountabi­lity for extrajudic­ial killings,” NAKPhilipp­ines said.

Fuss not about Gascon

For Sen. Panfilo Lacson, the fuss over the reduced CHR budget was not so much about Gascon, but the institutio­n itself.

The House of Representa­tives, in approving the measly budget, argued that the agency has made it a habit of defending criminals instead of actual human rights victims.

Alvarez even went to the extent of calling for the resignatio­n of Gascon in exchange for the restoratio­n of the P678millio­n proposed budget for the agency.

Lacson said that the current issue is beyond personalit­ies, but the survival of an agency created by the Constituti­on.

In a radio interview, Lacson questioned the legality of abolishing the CHR through this act of Congress to remove its budget for 2018 as it is a constituti­onal commission.

If the CHR is to be abolished, Lacson said that an amendment of the Constituti­on would have to be done to accomplish this.

Former CHR chair Loretta Rosales lamented an apparent massive ignorance among the public of the nature of the CHR.

“It is a commission that has been set up by the Constituti­on precisely to protect the rights of the people against (human rights) violations, specifical­ly (those) committed by the state,” Rosales told The STAR in a phone interview.

“When a crime is committed, the one responsibl­e for that is the police, not the CHR,” she added.

Senate Majority Leader Vicente Sotto III said that he understood the move of the House to reduce the budget of the CHR, which he attributed to Gascon’s constant criticism of the policies of President Duterte.

Sotto noted that Gascon has gone overboard in his criticisms of the President’s policies, which he said does not look good coming from the head of a government institutio­n.

Businessme­n express alarm

Local and foreign businessme­n yesterday expressed alarm over the passage in the House of Representa­tives of the measly P1,000 budget for the CHR.

“It surely worries everybody as it again sends the wrong signals,” European Chamber of Commerce of Philippine­s president Guenter Taus said.

“A budget of $20 for the human rights commission, I don’t think we are sending the right signals,” he added.

American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s senior advisor John Forbes declined to comment on his group’s behalf, saying that they would opt to wait until the budget is finalized.

Fund for free college education

Meanwhile, Davao City Rep. Karlo Alexei Nograles yesterday said the P2.4-billion total budget of three government agencies slapped with P1,000 budget for 2018 can be utilized to fund Duterte’s program to provide free college education to poor but deserving students.

budget will form part of the pool of funds to finance the free higher education law,” Nograles, chairman of the committee on appropriat­ions at the House of Representa­tives, revealed.

He was referring to the total aggregate amount of the CHR (P678 million), the Energy Regulatory Commission which has a P650.9-million allocation and the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples with its proposed P1.1-billion budget for 2018.

Nograles said the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act would benefit the youth through free tertiary education, a top priority of Duterte’s administra­tion.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Soldiers stand guard in front of damaged houses and buildings on Sept. 13 as government forces continue their assault against Maute terrorists who seized Mapandi district in Marawi City.
REUTERS Soldiers stand guard in front of damaged houses and buildings on Sept. 13 as government forces continue their assault against Maute terrorists who seized Mapandi district in Marawi City.

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