Concerns about
the deteriorating human rights situation in the Philippines and
the extra-judicial killings which have claimed the lives of
journalists, human rights workers and religious activists --
including the recent killing of former Supreme Bishop Alberto
Ramento of the Philippine Independent Church -- have been
registered, by church officials, with the Philippine Embassy and
the State Department in Washington, D.C.
The Rev. Canon Brian Grieves, director of Peace and Justice
Ministries, and the Rev. Dr. Fred Vergara, national missioner
for Asian American Ministries, represented outgoing Presiding
Bishop Frank Griswold, and the new Presiding Bishop, the Most
Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori, while visiting the Philippine
Embassy and the State Department November 2-3.
"We told Ambassador Willy Gaa at the Philippine Embassy that
we were there as a courtesy to let him know of the deep concern
among U.S. denominations over the deplorable number of
extra-judicial killings in the Philippines, and that we are
supporting our partner churches there as they prepare to
document these human rights violations," said Grieves, who will
visit partners in Manila in December to coordinate the church's
support of their efforts. "The Episcopal Church is fully
engaging this issue."
Gaa, who promised to relate the matter to Philippine
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, noted that the Philippine
Human Rights Report of the ecumenical churches should also be
submitted to the Melo Commission of the Philippine Government,
which is in charge of investigating the killings.
Jefferts Schori, underlining the church's mission priority
framed by the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), said that
"the advancement of human rights and religious freedom is an
integral part of human development. The Episcopal Church will be
strongly supportive of the efforts of our ecumenical and
concordat partners in the Philippines and Asia in work for human
rights, justice, freedom and peace."
Grieves noted that the Episcopal Church (TEC), through the
offices of Anglican and Global Relations, Episcopal Asian
American Ministries and Peace and Justice Ministries, is jointly
funding the Philippine Human Rights project in partnership with
the United Methodist Church and other denominations. The
documentation and writing of this project will be spearheaded by
the National Council of Churches in the Philippines.
During their visit to the State Department, Grieves and
Vergara conferred with Scot Marciel, director of Maritime
Southeast Asia; Clarissa Adamson, officer for human rights and
labor; and Tamara Crouse, foreign affairs officer for Asia.
Grieves and Vergara expressed their anxiety that, in light
of the U.S. war on terrorism and concern for Southern
Philippines (Mindanao) as a possible haven for terrorists'
training, the Bush Administration would turn a blind eye to
human rights violations in the Philippines, especially if some
sectors of the Philippine military are involved. They were
assured by the State Department that the human rights issue is
their top priority in the Philippines and Southeast Asia and
that they support the sentiments of the churches.
The U.S. State Department also informed Grieves and Vergara that
the U.S. Ambassador in Manila, Hon. Kristie Kenney, is gravely
concerned about this issue and very direct in expressing her
concern to the Philippine government. "We believe it is to the
best interest of the Arroyo administration to safeguard human
rights and ensure a strong judicial system to bring to justice
the perpetrators of extrajudicial killings in the Philippines as
a mark of its democracy," Marciel said. "Prosperity in a
democracy cannot happen at the expense of human rights,
political and religious freedom."
"The spate of extrajudicial killings in the Philippines that
included the outspoken human rights advocate, former Supreme
Bishop Alberto Ramento, is unacceptable and despicable and we
express our hope that the perpetrators of these killings be
brought to justice and the killings stop," Vergara said.
Ramento, who was found stabbed to death at his rectory in the
Parish of San Sebastian, Tarlac City, on the morning of October
3, had been an outspoken critic of the Philippine government and
a leading advocate for peace and human rights in the country.
Within days of Ramento's murder, another clergy member of the
Philippine Independent Church received a death threat via SMS
(Short Message Service) on his cellular phone, the Asian Human
Rights Commission reported.
Ramento was a member of the committee that drafted the
renewal of the terms of the concordat of full communion between
the Episcopal Church and the Philippine Independent Church (PIC),
which was signed by Griswold and incumbent PIC Supreme Bishop
Godofredo David during the Episcopal Church's 75th General
Convention in Columbus, Ohio, in June 2006.
Deploring Ramento's murder in an October 4 statement, David
"denounced in the strongest possible terms this barbaric and
dastardly act against a man of the cloth within the premises of
his own church," and urged the authorities to conduct a thorough
and impartial investigation and bring the perpetrators of
Ramento's murder to justice.
Ramento's death was the latest in a string of killings of
Christian leaders in the Philippines. According to various human
rights reports, there have been more than 700 political or
extrajudicial killings in the Philippines since President Arroyo
took power in 2001. Arroyo's presidency followed the second
"people power" movement that unseated former President Joseph
Estrada on charges of corruption.
The first "people power revolution" happened in 1985
following the assassination of Senator Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino
that brought an end to the martial law regime of President
Ferdinand Marcos and catapulted Aquino's widow, Corazon C.
Aquino, to presidency and restored the country to democracy.
Arroyo won the second term in the last Philippine presidential
election in 2004 amidst protests and charges of election fraud.
ENS coverage on the death of Bishop Ramento is available here
and
here.