‘Bring my mom home’

By Cong B. Corrales

ATTORNEY, iuwi nyo na Nanay ko ha?”

This poignant plea comes from a boy of six. And all he could do was whisper it in a bashful tone at the airport on Tuesday as lawyer Edre Olalia took his final steps to board the plane for Indonesia.

The boy’s mother and Olalia’s client, Mary Jane Veloso, is on now on death row in Yogyakarta.

Tricked? Indonesian policemen escort Mary Jane Veloso, who is on death row for alleged drug trafficking charges in Indonesia. Photo grabbed from "Save the Life of Mary Jane Veloso" Facebook group.

Tricked? Indonesian policemen escort Mary Jane Veloso, who is on death row for alleged drug trafficking charges in Indonesia. Photo grabbed from “Save the Life of Mary Jane Veloso” Facebook group.

Human rights lawyers are racing against time to save Mary Jane, an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) who had been sentenced to die by firing squad for drug trafficking charges.

Olalia, secretary-general of the National Union of People’s Lawyers (NUPL), and Mary Jane’s father flew to Indonesia Tuesday night to meet with the lawyer that had been appointed by the Philippine embassy to assist Mary Jane. Together, they hope to see Mary Jane at her detention facility in Yogyakarta.

The NUPL is the Philippine private lawyer of Mary Jane’s family. “Our services were only retained by the Veloso family since the evening of April 7,” said Olalia.

'We believe she had been tricked.' Celia Veloso, Mary Jane's mother, pleads withchurch leaders during a forum organized by the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform on April 8, 2015. Beside Celia are Mary Jane's sons | Bulatlat.com Photo

‘We believe she had been tricked.’ Celia Veloso, Mary Jane’s mother, pleads withchurch leaders during a forum organized by the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform on April 8, 2015. Beside Celia are Mary Jane’s sons | Bulatlat.com Photo

“We’re continuously conducting consultations and are in constant communication with foreign law experts and the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL) on all possible remedies available to stay or stop the execution of Mary Jane,” he added.

The NUPL legal team is working “24/7″ in studying the Indonesian jurisprudence on drug trafficking.

“We are on it,” Olalia said, adding that the NUPL lawyers see at least three reasons why the Indonesian Supreme Court must stop Mary Jane’s date with death. These, he said, are:

  • Mary Jane was denied her basic right to due process;
  • The death penalty is too harsh given her disputable participation in the alleged crime of trafficking drugs into Indonesia; and
  • Overriding humanitarian consideration “militate against the taking of her life through execution by firing squad.”

Olalia also noted apparent inconsistencies in the imposition of sentences in substantially similar cases.

On Saturday, April 18, Assistant Secretary Charles C. Jose, spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), told reporters that the Philippine Embassy in Indonesia wanted to file a second appeal for judicial review on Monday

Inaasahan natin na it will be considered as an ongoing appeals process,” Jose said.

Mary Jane’s mother Celia had derided the DFA for taking too long in responding to her family’s plea for legal assistance.

Mary Jane, 30, was arrested in 2010 at an airport in Indonesia after 2.6 kilograms of heroin were found hidden in the lining of her suitcase.

NUPL has asked DFA for “pertinent documentation and all documentary evidence of any actions, developments or updates on Mary Jane’s case,” Olalia said.

Until posting time, however, NUPL said the DFA has yet to give the requested documents. “Not at all, since we formally requested last April 10,” Olalia said.

Five years ago, Mary Jane was promised a work as a domestic helper in Malaysia by a certain Maria Kristina Sergio. But upon their arrival there, Sergio allegedly told Mary Jane that the job was no longer available and advised her to stay momentarily at a hotel in Kuala Lumpur.

Three days later, Sergio allegedly went to see Mary Jane at the hotel with supposedly good news that there is a job opening in Indonesia. Sergio allowed Mary Jane to just “borrow” her suitcase.

'Cash cows' of the republic? OFW remittances are a significant driver of the national economy. It helps shore up consumer spending. Chart screegrabbed from www.moneypolitics.pcij.org

‘Cash cows’ of the republic? OFW remittances are a significant driver of the national economy. It helps shore up consumer spending. Chart screegrabbed from www.moneypolitics.pcij.org

Mary Jane’s mother had told reporters that government should seek out Sergio as she could prove that Mary Jane had no knowledge of the heroin hidden in the lining of Sergio’s suitcase. Friends and relatives of Mary Jane who live in Cabanatuan City have said that they have also spotted Sergio in nearby Talavera town in Nueva Ecija.

For this purpose, Olalia said, the NUPL filed a letter-complaint with the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT), Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), and the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) last April 16.

Olalia said the imposition of the death penalty is not proportionate to Mary Jane’s alleged participation in the drug trafficking charge, “which was anything short of maximal.” – PCIJ, April 2015

‘Bring my mom home’

By Cong B. Corrales

ATTORNEY, iuwi nyo na Nanay ko ha?”

This poignant plea comes from a boy of six. And all he could do was whisper it in a bashful tone at the airport on Tuesday as lawyer Edre Olalia took his final steps to board the plane for Indonesia.

The boy’s mother and Olalia’s client, Mary Jane Veloso, is on now on death row in Yogyakarta.

Tricked? Indonesian policemen escort Mary Jane Veloso, who is on death row for alleged drug trafficking charges in Indonesia. Photo grabbed from "Save the Life of Mary Jane Veloso" Facebook group.

Tricked? Indonesian policemen escort Mary Jane Veloso, who is on death row for alleged drug trafficking charges in Indonesia. Photo grabbed from “Save the Life of Mary Jane Veloso” Facebook group.

Human rights lawyers are racing against time to save Mary Jane, an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) who had been sentenced to die by firing squad for drug trafficking charges.

Olalia, secretary-general of the National Union of People’s Lawyers (NUPL), and Mary Jane’s father flew to Indonesia Tuesday night to meet with the lawyer that had been appointed by the Philippine embassy to assist Mary Jane. Together, they hope to see Mary Jane at her detention facility in Yogyakarta.

The NUPL is the Philippine private lawyer of Mary Jane’s family. “Our services were only retained by the Veloso family since the evening of April 7,” said Olalia.

'We believe she had been tricked.' Celia Veloso, Mary Jane's mother, pleads withchurch leaders during a forum organized by the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform on April 8, 2015. Beside Celia are Mary Jane's sons | Bulatlat.com Photo

‘We believe she had been tricked.’ Celia Veloso, Mary Jane’s mother, pleads withchurch leaders during a forum organized by the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform on April 8, 2015. Beside Celia are Mary Jane’s sons | Bulatlat.com Photo

“We’re continuously conducting consultations and are in constant communication with foreign law experts and the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL) on all possible remedies available to stay or stop the execution of Mary Jane,” he added.

The NUPL legal team is working “24/7″ in studying the Indonesian jurisprudence on drug trafficking.

“We are on it,” Olalia said, adding that the NUPL lawyers see at least three reasons why the Indonesian Supreme Court must stop Mary Jane’s date with death. These, he said, are:

  • Mary Jane was denied her basic right to due process;
  • The death penalty is too harsh given her disputable participation in the alleged crime of trafficking drugs into Indonesia; and
  • Overriding humanitarian consideration “militate against the taking of her life through execution by firing squad.”

Olalia also noted apparent inconsistencies in the imposition of sentences in substantially similar cases.

On Saturday, April 18, Assistant Secretary Charles C. Jose, spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), told reporters that the Philippine Embassy in Indonesia wanted to file a second appeal for judicial review on Monday

Inaasahan natin na it will be considered as an ongoing appeals process,” Jose said.

Mary Jane’s mother Celia had derided the DFA for taking too long in responding to her family’s plea for legal assistance.

Mary Jane, 30, was arrested in 2010 at an airport in Indonesia after 2.6 kilograms of heroin were found hidden in the lining of her suitcase.

NUPL has asked DFA for “pertinent documentation and all documentary evidence of any actions, developments or updates on Mary Jane’s case,” Olalia said.

Until posting time, however, NUPL said the DFA has yet to give the requested documents. “Not at all, since we formally requested last April 10,” Olalia said.

Five years ago, Mary Jane was promised a work as a domestic helper in Malaysia by a certain Maria Kristina Sergio. But upon their arrival there, Sergio allegedly told Mary Jane that the job was no longer available and advised her to stay momentarily at a hotel in Kuala Lumpur.

Three days later, Sergio allegedly went to see Mary Jane at the hotel with supposedly good news that there is a job opening in Indonesia. Sergio allowed Mary Jane to just “borrow” her suitcase.

'Cash cows' of the republic? OFW remittances are a significant driver of the national economy. It helps shore up consumer spending. Chart screegrabbed from www.moneypolitics.pcij.org

‘Cash cows’ of the republic? OFW remittances are a significant driver of the national economy. It helps shore up consumer spending. Chart screegrabbed from www.moneypolitics.pcij.org

Mary Jane’s mother had told reporters that government should seek out Sergio as she could prove that Mary Jane had no knowledge of the heroin hidden in the lining of Sergio’s suitcase. Friends and relatives of Mary Jane who live in Cabanatuan City have said that they have also spotted Sergio in nearby Talavera town in Nueva Ecija.

For this purpose, Olalia said, the NUPL filed a letter-complaint with the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT), Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), and the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) last April 16.

Olalia said the imposition of the death penalty is not proportionate to Mary Jane’s alleged participation in the drug trafficking charge, “which was anything short of maximal.” – PCIJ, April 2015

CSOs deride World Bank ‘failings’

By Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

THE WORLD BANK, a global lending institution committed to fighting poverty, has found itself in hot waters recently after 85 civil society organizations and independent experts from 37 countries decried its supposedly “inadequate response” in addressing the perceived failures of its Resettlement Action Plan.

In the letter addressed to World Bank’s president Jim Yong Kim, the non government organizations, including Human Rights Watch (HRW), observed that the bank’s resettlement practices do not address the “serious failings” it had committed to marginalized communities, including indigenous peoples and women.

“Communities forced to make way for bank-finance projects have suffered serious harm, but a plan to identify the affected people and make things right is entirely absent from the bank’s response,” Jessica Evans, senior international financial institutions researcher at HRW said.

Daily life in a refugee camp in South Sudan where 154 people are estimated to be displaced by one project of the World Bank. Photo by Adreea Campeanu|International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

Daily life in a refugee camp in South Sudan where 154 people are estimated to be displaced by one project of the World Bank. Photo by Adreea Campeanu|International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

The groups lamented what they called the lack of transparency in the review of the World Bank’s resettlement practices. The Bank had reportedly kept the first phase of the review away from public scrutiny for more than two years, the groups said in the letter.

“The World Bank’s resettlement review found serious failings,” said Evans.

A joint investigative report by the Washington DC-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington Post titled “How the World Bank broke its promise to protect the poor,” said an estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004.

An estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004, reports the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington. Photo screengrab from ICIJ website

An estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004, reports the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington. Photo screengrab from ICIJ website

The report said the World Bank does not review its project properly and “frequently has no idea what happens to people after they are removed” from the communities that host Bank-funded projects.

“The World Bank and its private-sector lending arm, the International Finance Corp., have financed governments and companies accused of human rights violations such as rape, murder and torture,” the ICIJ report read in part.

In the Philippines, the ICIJ reported that eight projects funded by the World Bank here will displace an estimated 5,132 people. The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism is the Philippinel member of ICIJ.

“In many cases, it has continued to do business with governments that have abused their citizens, sending a signal that borrowers have little to fear if they violate the bank’s rules,” the ICIJ report quoted current and former World Bank employees as saying. – PCIJ, April 2015

CSOs deride World Bank ‘failings’

By Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

THE WORLD BANK, a global lending institution committed to fighting poverty, has found itself in hot waters recently after 85 civil society organizations and independent experts from 37 countries decried its supposedly “inadequate response” in addressing the perceived failures of its Resettlement Action Plan.

In the letter addressed to World Bank’s president Jim Yong Kim, the non government organizations, including Human Rights Watch (HRW), observed that the bank’s resettlement practices do not address the “serious failings” it had committed to marginalized communities, including indigenous peoples and women.

“Communities forced to make way for bank-finance projects have suffered serious harm, but a plan to identify the affected people and make things right is entirely absent from the bank’s response,” Jessica Evans, senior international financial institutions researcher at HRW said.

Daily life in a refugee camp in South Sudan where 154 people are estimated to be displaced by one project of the World Bank. Photo by Adreea Campeanu|International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

Daily life in a refugee camp in South Sudan where 154 people are estimated to be displaced by one project of the World Bank. Photo by Adreea Campeanu|International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

The groups lamented what they called the lack of transparency in the review of the World Bank’s resettlement practices. The Bank had reportedly kept the first phase of the review away from public scrutiny for more than two years, the groups said in the letter.

“The World Bank’s resettlement review found serious failings,” said Evans.

A joint investigative report by the Washington DC-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington Post titled “How the World Bank broke its promise to protect the poor,” said an estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004.

An estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004, reports the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington. Photo screengrab from ICIJ website

An estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004, reports the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington. Photo screengrab from ICIJ website

The report said the World Bank does not review its project properly and “frequently has no idea what happens to people after they are removed” from the communities that host Bank-funded projects.

“The World Bank and its private-sector lending arm, the International Finance Corp., have financed governments and companies accused of human rights violations such as rape, murder and torture,” the ICIJ report read in part.

In the Philippines, the ICIJ reported that eight projects funded by the World Bank here will displace an estimated 5,132 people. The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism is the Philippinel member of ICIJ.

“In many cases, it has continued to do business with governments that have abused their citizens, sending a signal that borrowers have little to fear if they violate the bank’s rules,” the ICIJ report quoted current and former World Bank employees as saying. – PCIJ, April 2015

CSOs deride World Bank ‘failings’

By Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

THE WORLD BANK, a global lending institution committed to fighting poverty, has found itself in hot waters recently after 85 civil society organizations and independent experts from 37 countries decried its supposedly “inadequate response” in addressing the perceived failures of its Resettlement Action Plan.

In the letter addressed to World Bank’s president Jim Yong Kim, the non government organizations, including Human Rights Watch (HRW), observed that the bank’s resettlement practices do not address the “serious failings” it had committed to marginalized communities, including indigenous peoples and women.

“Communities forced to make way for bank-finance projects have suffered serious harm, but a plan to identify the affected people and make things right is entirely absent from the bank’s response,” Jessica Evans, senior international financial institutions researcher at HRW said.

Daily life in a refugee camp in South Sudan where 154 people are estimated to be displaced by one project of the World Bank. Photo by Adreea Campeanu|International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

Daily life in a refugee camp in South Sudan where 154 people are estimated to be displaced by one project of the World Bank. Photo by Adreea Campeanu|International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

The groups lamented what they called the lack of transparency in the review of the World Bank’s resettlement practices. The Bank had reportedly kept the first phase of the review away from public scrutiny for more than two years, the groups said in the letter.

“The World Bank’s resettlement review found serious failings,” said Evans.

A joint investigative report by the Washington DC-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington Post titled “How the World Bank broke its promise to protect the poor,” said an estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004.

An estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004, reports the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington. Photo screengrab from ICIJ website

An estimated 3.4 million people have been physically or economically displaced by World Bank-funded project since 2004, reports the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and The Huffington. Photo screengrab from ICIJ website

The report said the World Bank does not review its project properly and “frequently has no idea what happens to people after they are removed” from the communities that host Bank-funded projects.

“The World Bank and its private-sector lending arm, the International Finance Corp., have financed governments and companies accused of human rights violations such as rape, murder and torture,” the ICIJ report read in part.

In the Philippines, the ICIJ reported that eight projects funded by the World Bank here will displace an estimated 5,132 people. The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism is the Philippinel member of ICIJ.

“In many cases, it has continued to do business with governments that have abused their citizens, sending a signal that borrowers have little to fear if they violate the bank’s rules,” the ICIJ report quoted current and former World Bank employees as saying. – PCIJ, April 2015