MANILA – In an unprecedented move, Papal Nuncio
Archbishop Fernando Filoni recently expressed alarm over the growing number of
unresolved murders of Filipino journalists and activists.
Speaking before members of the Society of
Catholic Social Scientists and the School of Economics Units of the University
of Asia and the Pacific in Metro Manila, Filoni stressed that the string of
killings is disturbing, considering that President Arroyo recently signed the
law that abolished capital punishment in the Philippines.
“I am surprised to see that, in the Philippines,
there is still an activity of high incidence of moral and political violence
against those who profess different political ideologies, like the journalists,
columnists and writers, among others," he said.
The Vatican representative to Manila pointed out that
the violence and the political killings are not helping the people as well as
the nation to be progressive because these upheavals serve as a stumbling block
for Filipinos who want to move forward and achieve their goals.
“This incidence (of political killings)
unduly delays the ability of society and the Filipino people in their lives
when they encounter such violence," Filoni said.
International human rights organizations,
journalists groups and other advocacy groups have said more than 700 persons
were killed since Mrs. Arroyo assumed the presidency in 2001.
Having stayed in Iraq for five
years, Filoni said he is not a stranger to any violence and particularly the
rampant violations of human rights along religious lines.
“Coming from a country where I have just
been for five years, I have witnessed the continued violations of the rights of
the entire people, of the right of the poor to defend (themselves), of the
rights of the religious communities to express their own sentiments and beliefs
and the rights of the various organizations to upkeep individuals in the
community," the newly installed representative of the Holy See to the
Philippines added.
While he lauded the President’s decision
in abolishing the death penalty, Filoni noted that the spate of killings is
still raising many questions on the real motive of the government in junking
capital punishment.
Filoni described the abolition of the
death penalty as a “profound sense of humanity’ and a “pro-active (stand) and more
elevated form of civility.”
He, however, pointed out that the series
of murders was contradicting what the Philippine government wants to project to
the world.
“Whether it be the political or the
religious point of view, it will truly be a contradiction, if on the one hand,
we practically abolished the death penalty and yet, on the other hand, we are
not respecting or implementing the (protected) rights of the human race,"
the Papal Nuncio said.
Jaro Archbishop Angel Lagdameo, president
of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, in the CBCP’s pastoral
statement released last July 10, 2006, voiced stronger concern over
extra-judicial killings.
“We join the outcry of groups that have
denounced the increasing number of extra-judicial killings of journalists and
social activists suspected as sympathizers of insurgents allegedly by some
ultra-rightist elements in the military," Lagdameo said.
According to him, many dioceses have been
receiving letters and lists of persons who had been victims of political
killings.
Lagdameo said they “cannot close our eyes
to the great number of extra-judicial killings that sometimes do not come to
light in the newspapers but are known to us in our dioceses."
Meanwhile, Filoni said there is still
hope for the Philippines
if government leaders will show more concern for the plight of the poor and the
marginalized sectors in the country.