Yellows to Work Double Time to Destroy PRRD after Cayetano's UN victory. ~SHARE
The counterattack of Yellows has started to happen and Senator Riza Hontiveros has fired the first shot.
On Monday, September 25, 2017, Senator Risa Hontiveros said the United Nations Human Rights Council’s (UNHRC) adoption of the Philippines’ Universal Periodic Review (UPR) was a “fake victory” on the part of the Duterte administration.
“Kung may fake news, may pekeng tagumpay. Walang tagumpay na nangyari sa United Nations Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review process. Talo ang sambayanan,” Hontiveros said in a statement.
Panic Time!
“Kung may fake news, may pekeng tagumpay. Walang tagumpay na nangyari sa United Nations Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review process. Talo ang sambayanan,” Hontiveros said in a statement.
Panic Time!
It is panic time for the Yellows as their lies about the drug war is being exposed. Now the world is beginning to understand why the war on drugs is very important.
As Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano said, "the government's war against drugs is a necessary instrument to preserve and protect, and not violate human rights in the country".
"Security and human rights are not incompatible. Indeed, the first is our duty to the other," Cayetano said at the 72nd session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Sunday.
"Without security, the most basic human rights, to life and safety, are constantly under attack — from terrorism, criminality, drug and human trafficking," he added.
This is a very big victory for the Duterte administration.
Malacañang welcomed the adoption of the report. "The adoption of the Philippine UPR Report in Geneva recognizes the human rights record of the Philippines and our country's commitment to human rights under the leadership of President Rodrigo Roa Duterte," Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto Abella said in a statement Saturday.
The Philippines is under attack by its own people, the Yellows who have been spreading false information so that they can regain power.
That is why Foreign Affairs Secretary warned the UN member-states against "misinformation" on the Duterte administration's war against drugs.
"We should never tolerate human rights abuses but neither should we tolerate misinformation, fake news on and politicization of human rights," he said.
The Philippines is serving its fourth term as a UNHRC member, being one of the first 47 members since 2006. Forty-two member states of are reviewed every year.
Shown below are the issues Senator Cayetano discussed at the United Nations.
On the War on drugs
- As a responsible leader, the Philippine president launched a vigorous campaign against the illegal drug trade to save lives, preserve families, protect communities and stop the country’s slide into a narco-state.
- As of August 2017, the drug trade had penetrated at least 24,848 barangays. This is 59 percent of the total of 42,036 of the smallest government units spanning our archipelago, the ones directly in touch with our people.
- While drug addiction calls for rehabilitation, drug trafficking surely calls for stern measures—though always consistent with the rule of law. The President has and will always have zero-tolerance for abusive cops, as time will show.
- The drug trade has penetrated even law enforcement.
- But we cannot live with drugs because drugs will not let us live. We can no more live with drugs than with terrorism, which, the United Nations admits, and as we have discovered is funded by the drug trade.
Counterterrorism and violent extremism
- We should hold no illusion that the threat posed by the Islamic State will be over with the collapse of its self-proclaimed caliphate in Iraq and very soon in Syria. Rather, we should all be ready to confront a very potent threat that has spread to other parts of the world.
- The Armed Forces of the Philippines shall regain full control of Marawi from Islamic State-inspired terrorists.
- Terrorism is a global problem that no country can tackle alone.
- The Philippines welcomes the creation of the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Office to bring into a cohesive whole the work on counterterrorism by the Member States and the UN.
Rule of law
- The issues are numerous, intertwined and complex. Territorial claims, Sovereignty rights, security and protection of marine life and resources, to name a few.
- The Philippines, as ASEAN Chairman this year, looks forward to commencing negotiations on the long-overdue code of conduct in West Philippine Sea/South China Sea.
- We thank the individual ASEAN states and China for their utmost cooperation in this endeavor.
It is expected that because of the victory of the Duterte administration, the Yellows will work double time to bring down the government.
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