Cool to UNHRC

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2019 17:36:56 +0000

 

jullie yap daza - medium rare

WE could welcome the Unit­ed Nations Human Rights Council’s fact-finding team “into our kitchen, dining room, living room, but not the bedroom.”

Filipino hospitality to the core! Words spoken by former ambas­sador to the United Nations Lauro Baja, in the language of diplomats to cool down tempers without losing our heads over Iceland’s proposal to have us investigated for alleged human rights viola­tions in the war against drugs.

With everybody speaking at the same time in discordant tones – the President, his spokesman, the secretary of Foreign Affairs, senators, commentators, ex­perts, noisemakers – Mr. Baja notes that we’re quite a talk­ative people. In a phone-patch interview over DZMM Teleradyo last Monday, he pointed out that “there is no enforcement provi­sion for UNHRC” and we could “go to other agencies in the UN” for recourse.

Speaking calmly, his voice soothing like ice cubes in a glass of mint julep on a hot day, Am­bassador Borja also suggested that our diplomats invite repre­sentatives of those 18 countries that voted “yes” to Iceland’s proposal to come over and see things for themselves. What will they see? That those so-called EJK’s are not state policy, that the courts are working, that the state of drugs use is a serious problem here.

(It’s a long shot, but can our policemen learn to shoot – not to kill but to disable? If there have been 7,000 dead pushers, dealers, users, one can only infer that cops are extremely skillful deadeyes, which means they can be retrained to be less deadly, to aim for a leg, foot, arm, or shoul­der instead of the head or chest. Easier said than done; yes, it can be done, or what’s a firing range with target practice for?)

Iceland is home to 2,000 Fili­pinos, a tiny group, but then there are only 300,000 Iceland­ers. Theirs may be a cold country but it’s also an island like ours, with active volcanoes like ours. As Lourd de Veyra annotated on TV5 News, there’s more green in Iceland than Greenland and more ice in Greenland than Ice­land. Whichever, I prefer our own colorful, tropical islands any day, any season.

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