HomeNewsCandidates in presidential election urged to promise to free jailed senator

Candidates in presidential election urged to promise to free jailed senator

Senator De Lima has been detained since February 2017 on drug charges, allegedly in retaliation for her criticism of President Rodrigo Duterte’s “war on drugs”

Human Rights Watch called on candidates for the Philippine presidency to pledge to drop all charges against Senator Leila de Lima, who has been in jail in the past six years.

De Lima has been detained since February 2017 on drug charges, allegedly in retaliation for her criticism of President Rodrigo Duterte’s “war on drugs” and other serious human rights violations.

De Lima was chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights when she began an investigation in 2009 into “death squad” killings in Davao City, where Duterte was the longtime mayor.



After becoming president in 2016, Duterte quickly sought to sideline De Lima, a senator, politically. Duterte’s allies in the Senate removed her from a committee chairmanship.

She was arrested on February 24, 2017, and has been held at the police headquarters at Camp Crame, where she faces drug-related cases.

“Senator de Lima’s long-term wrongful detention exemplifies the lawlessness and cruelty of the Duterte administration,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

“Candidates for president should commit to free de Lima immediately and to rebuild the Philippines’ tarnished criminal justice system to meet international standards,” added Adams.

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Nine candidates are running to succeed Duterte, who is prevented by the Constitution from seeking reelection.

Although de Lima has been prevented from participating in Senate sessions or using her cell phone and other communication devices while held in the police headquarters in Manila, she is seeking reelection to the Senate in the elections scheduled for May 9.

The three charges against de Lima have moved slowly in courts. Five judges withdrew from the cases, while at least two witnesses died in the national penitentiary.

In February 2021, de Lima was acquitted of one of the charges.

She continued to perform her legislative duties even though her colleagues have refused to allow her to participate in hearings, even online.

Because the authorities do not allow her to use electronic devices, she is forced to give handwritten notes to aides, who disseminate them to the outside world.

In one such note, De Lima said, “I’m running because, to put it plainly, my work is not done.”

In campaign rallies, the senator is often represented onstage by her aide or lawyer holding her cut-out likeness.

“Leila de Lima has been a stalwart advocate for human rights in the Philippines before and since her wrongful arrest five years ago,” Adams said.

“She should not have to wait for the election of the country’s next president to be released.”

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