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The death toll from the fire that devastated the Wang Fuk Court residential complex in Hong Kong has increased to 161, following new forensic identifications that clarified the number of victims recovered from the site, authorities confirmed.

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Police Commissioner Joe Chow said the revision came after genetic tests established that remains previously counted as a single victim in fact belonged to a married couple. He stressed that forensic work is still ongoing and that the final number of fatalities may change as examinations continue. According to Chow, the identification process remains particularly challenging due to the condition of some of the recovered remains.

Chow also reported that the removal of protective netting and bamboo scaffolding from building facades began on Friday. For safety reasons, these operations are currently limited to four of the seven buildings affected by the fire. The collection of material evidence is still underway, and officials have not set a deadline for completing the process.

Hong Kongers offered flowers and bowed outside a funeral parlor to pay tribute to a firefighter who was among the 160 people killed by the city's deadliest fire in decades. https://t.co/YvVG2MlI9D

— The Associated Press (@AP) December 19, 2025

The fire erupted on November 26, when netting covering bamboo scaffolding between the ground floor and first floor of Wang Cheong House caught fire. The blaze spread with unusual speed across the complex, eventually reaching six additional towers.

In response to the scale of the tragedy, the Hong Kong government established an Independent Commission of Inquiry, chaired by a magistrate, to determine the causes of both the ignition and the rapid spread of the fire. The commission’s mandate includes reviewing procedures used in building renovation contracts, assessing the adequacy of existing regulations, examining potential criminal responsibility, and issuing recommendations to the government. The final report is expected within nine months.

In parallel, the Independent Commission Against Corruption arrested the current chairman of the owners’ corporation and his predecessor on Wednesday as part of a broader investigation linked to the disaster.

Wang Fuk Court was built in 1983 under a public affordable housing program and consists of eight 31-story towers with nearly 2,000 apartments. According to the 2021 census, the complex was home to 4,643 residents.

In a moving funeral service on Friday, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region bid a final farewell to Ho Wai-ho, the firefighter who lost his life while combating last month's #TaiPo fire, which has so far claimed the lives of 160 residents of #HongKong. #大埔 #大埔火災pic.twitter.com/bRXyHLt11f

— China Daily (@ChinaDaily) December 20, 2025

At the time of the fire, the buildings were undergoing renovation works valued at 330 million Hong Kong dollars and were fully covered with bamboo scaffolding and safety netting. Subsequent investigations found that some of the netting used did not meet required fire-resistance standards and that highly flammable expanded polystyrene panels had been installed. These findings contributed to the rapid spread of the fire and raised suspicions of improper cost-cutting and failures in procurement processes.

In September, the leadership of the owners’ corporation was renewed, and the Labour Department carried out inspections that resulted in sanctions. The most recent official inspection took place one week before the fire.

More than twenty people have been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter and offenses related to public administration, including individuals connected to contracting companies.


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 The deadlock exposed the bicam not as a venue for reconciliation but as a bargaining table over pork.

By Dulce Amor Rodriguez
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) rejected the proposed 2026 national budget, saying the bicameral conference committee approved what it called a “re-enacted pork barrel budget” that entrenches patronage politics despite widespread public outrage over corruption.

In statements released from Dec. 13 to Dec. 19, Bayan said that the reconciled General Appropriations Bill preserves and expands pork barrel–type allocations through infrastructure projects, social assistance programs, confidential funds, and unprogrammed appropriations.

DPWH as pork barrel centerpiece

Bayan said that the Department of Public Works and Highways remains the centerpiece of the pork barrel system after the bicam approved a P529.6-billion ($9.5-billion) budget for the agency.

While lower than this year’s allocation, the group said that the amount retains lawmakers’ “allocables” and insertions that have long been linked to kickbacks, advance payments, and politically dictated infrastructure projects, particularly flood control ones.

Previous investigations and congressional testimonies, Bayan said, already exposed how infrastructure budgets serve as major sources of so-called standard operating procedures (SOPs) or kickbacks for legislators and contractors.

Expanded patronage

Bayan flagged sharp increases in social assistance programs that it said function as de facto pork barrels.

The Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situation rose to P63.9 billion ($1.1 billion) while the Medical Assistance to Indigent and Financially Incapacitated Patients program increased to P51 billion ($910 million). Bayan said that both programs remain heavily mediated by politicians and are vulnerable to patronage politics.

Congress allocated P2 billion ($36 million) to the Tulong Dunong program. Bayan said that the fund is coursed through legislators’ offices and used to cultivate political loyalty rather than build a coherent education support system.

Local, counterinsurgency allocations

Local patronage funds also increased, including the P38.1-billion ($680 million) Local Government Support Fund.

Bayan criticized the P8-billion ($143 million) Barangay Development Program under the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict, citing its politicized implementation, lack of transparency, and links to counterinsurgency and human rights violations.

Confidential, unprogrammed funds retained

Bayan condemned the retention of more than P11 billion ($196 million) in confidential and intelligence funds, including in civilian agencies where such allocations are unnecessary and shielded from public scrutiny.

More alarming, the group said, is the P243-billion ($4.3-billion) unprogrammed appropriations, which allow the President to spend outside the regular budget process. Bayan described these funds as opaque and prone to political manipulation.

Bicam deadlock

Bayan linked reported delays in bicameral proceedings to disputes between the House of Representatives and the Senate over pork barrel allocations, particularly the proposed P54-billion cut in the Public Works budget.

The group said that the House and the executive branch resisted the reduction because a lower infrastructure budget would mean fewer discretionary projects and reduced kickbacks.

According to Bayan, the deadlock exposed the bicam not as a venue for reconciliation but as a bargaining table over pork.

Calls for transparency, protest

Bayan criticized what it called the Marcos Jr. administration’s duplicity, saying that the 2026 budget contradicts official claims of fighting corruption. It also belittled plans to livestream bicam sessions, noting that lawmakers can easily shift to closed-door executive meetings.

The group demanded the immediate disclosure of all budget insertions, amendments, and allocables per district and per lawmaker.

As the budget nears signing, Bayan called on the public to reject the 2026 spending plan and sustain protests demanding transparency and accountability. During press briefings, protesters chanted calls to scrap unprogrammed appropriations, confidential funds, and pork barrel allocations.“The budget should serve the people, not political dynasties and vested interests,” Bayan said, warning that approving the 2026 budget in its current form would deepen public outrage and erode trust in government. (DAA)

The post Bayan rejects 2026 budget, exposes pork barrel in bicam version appeared first on Bulatlat.


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“We will not stop until justice is served. We have done nothing wrong. Their accusations bear no truth and we will continue to challenge it and push for any legal remedies available to us.”

MANILA – More than 210 Lumad schools have been forcibly closed since then president Rodrigo Duterte ordered them shut down. Not a single school has been allowed to operate and now, they are coming for the activists who rescued Lumad students and volunteer teachers in distress.

The Court of Appeals (CA) – Cagayan de Oro recently upheld the decision of Tagum City Regional Trial Court Branch 7, convicting the humanitarian workers collectively known as “Talaingod 13” of “other forms of child abuse”.

“We have to bring out the narrative: the Lumad communities suffered incessant bombing, hamleting, and some were killed. Their schools forcibly closed and paramilitary groups swarmed to threaten them,” said Beverly Longid, national convener of indigenous group Kalipunan ng Katutubong Mamamayan ng Pilipinas (Katribu), in a press conference on December 19.

The case stemmed from a November 2018 solidarity mission to bring food and other essentials to Lumad students of the Salugpongan Ta’Tanu Igkanogon Community Learning Center Inc. (STTICLC) and the Community Technical College of Southeastern Mindanao (CTCSM) in the hinterlands of Talaingod, Davao del Norte.

The police claimed that the mission was not coordinated with the authorities and that members of the mission were kidnapping students and teachers they fetched in the night.

But the Talaingod 13 and indigenous peoples rights groups denied the accusations, saying the mission was properly coordinated with the local authorities.

Read: ‘Clear miscarriage of justice’ | Court convicts activists, rights workers over child-trafficking case

“This is unacceptable. This is heavy on my part as a teacher,” said former ACT Teachers Party-list Rep. France Castro in Filipino. “The Lumad students and volunteer teachers were harassed, suffered from food blockade, and even to the point they had to look for sanctuary. It is an utmost priority that time to rescue them.”

The national solidarity mission was based on the invitation by the Save Our Schools Network. The group requested rescue of the militarized Lumad communities in Talaingod, who were facing imminent threats to their life from the hands of paramilitary group Alamara.

Angelika Moral, a rescued Lumad student, belied the charges filed against the humanitarian workers during the launching of Defend Talaingod 13. “They helped us. We were not forced to join them. In fact, they are our second parents. They are the ones who took care of us, when our parents are not around,” she said in Filipino.

In tears, Moral narrated what happened that day:  “Since the military forced us to leave, we had to walk for three hours just to reach the highway. The trail was dark, slippery, and steep. When we reached the highway, we saw the rescue team.”

Read: Rescued Lumad youth debunks kidnapping, child-abuse raps against Talaingod 13

“It is our protocol to conduct a courtesy visit to the city mayor , municipal governor, and the local officials. But during that time, not one of them was available,” said former Bayan Muna Rep. Satur Ocampo, also part of the national solidarity mission.

“I even talked to Bong Go that time, who was then the special aide of the president. But they all refused to respond to us.”

All of Mindanao was under martial law when the humanitarian mission was done. The whole region was placed under military control for more than two years from May 23, 2017 up to December 31, 2019.

The failure of laws to protect

Both mission responders and the Lumad people should have been guaranteed protection under International Humanitarian Law (IHL) or also known as the rules of war, since they are all civilians.

Not only is the Philippines a signatory of the Geneva Conventions, rendering them accountable for IHL violations, but it also has a domestic law that criminalizes such act under the Philippine Act on Crimes Against International Humanitarian Law, Genocide, and Other Crimes Against Humanity.

“Despite the Philippines being a signatory of the convention, there is a pattern of abuses that we have been seeing. We have seen disrespect and non-compliance of the Philippine state. It is alarming,” said Kabataan Party-list Rep. Renee Co.

Co, together with Gabriela Party-list Rep. Sarah Elago and ACT Teachers Party-list Rep. Antonio Tinio, filed a House resolution to conduct a probe on the potential IHL violations in the country last August, with the objective to assess its effectiveness.

“We have seen that this law has no strength against the violators,” Co added. “The threats from Alamara (paramilitary) was an imminent danger during the context of the mission.”

Beyond the IHL, Longid said that the attacks against Talaingod 13 and the Lumad communities also violate the international human rights instruments. One, for example, is the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).

“The declaration actually prohibits forced evacuation, forced surrenders, and forced recruitment to both the military and the paramilitary. It also has a very strict provision on free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) not only on projects but also in other activities that affect the indigenous peoples, including militarization,” Longid said.

Article 8 of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples stipulates the right of indigenous peoples to not be subjected to forced assimilation or destruction of their culture.

It also delineates the obligation of the state to prevent any action aimed at depriving them of their integrity, land and territories, and forced population transfer.

Dispossession in education

The establishment of the Lumad schools is a by-product of the indigenous people’s assertion of their right to self-determination in education.

“The Lumad schools have a special framework. These had been established due to the absence of basic social services, including education, to the Lumad communities,” said Rev. Mario Balawag of United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP). “It goes beyond providing education for the Lumad children but also to their parents.”

Lumad schools paved the way for a specialized community-based learning about agriculture and self-sufficient farming, general academics and health, collective right to self-determination, and environmental protection – a distinct program in contrast to the normative education in the Philippines.

Read: Context of Talaingod incident | The decades-old struggle of Lumad in Pantaron Mountain Range for ancestral land, right to self-determination

“But how can the children and parents study in the context of armed conflict? Instead of being surrounded by papers, they were surrounded by guns (from military and paramilitary elements),” Balawag added.

While it was Duterte who ordered the Lumad schools shut down, not one has been permitted to operate during the administration of Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

“Some schools were completely destroyed,” Longid said. “The rate of militarization has not decreased. In fact, the budget for counter-insurgency increased.”

Human rights group Karapatan flagged the proposed P8-billion budget for the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), citing a more than 300-percent increase from its 2025 allocation. Karapatan secretary general Cristina Palabay said that the agency is a state terror machine: “Not only a waste of the people’s money, but money used to fund repression.”

Read: Groups renew call to abolish NTF-ELCAC, junk confidential funds

“The NTF-ELCAC is one of the leading agencies behind the attacks against the human rights activists under the so-called whole of the nation approach of the counter-insurgency,” said Liza Maza, president of Makabayan coalition and former representative of Bayan Muna and Gabriela Party-list.

In the previous years, the Lumad schools were targeted by the NTF-ELCAC, associating them with terrorism and extending the political vilification to news outfits covering the plight of the Lumad people, including Bulatlat.

Maza added that more than 10,000 Lumad students were impacted by the forced closure of their schools. The counter-insurgency program also continues under the National Action Plan for Unity Peace and Development covering 2025 to 2028.

“We will not stop until justice is served. We have done nothing wrong. Their accusations bear no truth and we will continue to challenge it and push for any legal remedies available to us,” said Castro.Beyond the courts, the Defend Talaingod 13 Network vows to continue campaigning for the humanitarian mission workers and the Lumad communities in the Philippines. (JDS)

The post Closing Lumad schools not enough, gov’t targets humanitarian mission activists appeared first on Bulatlat.


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The United States has launched what it described as a “large-scale attack” against Islamic State (IS) targets in central Syria, following an ambush last week that killed two U.S. soldiers and an American interpreter near the city of Palmyra.

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In a brief statement released on Friday, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said that American forces had initiated “a large-scale attack against IS infrastructure and weapons storage facilities in Syria.” The command stated that the operation was carried out in response to the attack against U.S. forces and their allies on December 13.

Shortly after the announcement, U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth confirmed the operation on social media, saying it had been named Operation Hawk Eye Attack. “This is not the beginning of a war, it is a statement of vengeance,” Hegseth wrote.

Tonight, U.S. and Jordanian forces struck 70+ ISIS targets in Syria with 100+ precision munitions. Peace through strength. pic.twitter.com/XWWvfqBBFT

— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) December 20, 2025

He added: “As we said immediately after the brutal attack (of December 13), if you attack Americans anywhere in the world, you will spend the rest of your short and anguished life knowing that the United States will pursue you, find you, and eliminate you mercilessly.”

According to an anonymous U.S. official cited by The New York Times, dozens of suspected IS positions across several areas of central Syria were targeted using fighter jets, attack helicopters and artillery barrages. The official said the bombardment was expected to last several hours.

Night strikes in Syria⚔️🚨

U.S. and Jordanian forces carried out strikes on over 70 ISIS targets, using more than 100 precision-guided munitions. pic.twitter.com/5tyvH256yK

— China pulse | 中国脉搏 🇨🇳 (@Eng_china5) December 20, 2025

The December 13 ambush, carried out by a lone gunman, took place near Palmyra and resulted in the deaths of two U.S. service members and an interpreter. They were the first Americans to die in Syria since the fall of the government of Bashar al-Assad last year.

In a separate statement posted on the social media platform X, CENTCOM described the operation as the most extensive U.S. military action in Syria since the collapse of the Syrian government. The statement confirmed that the overnight strikes were directly linked to the deaths of three Americans, including two military personnel, in the Palmyra attack.

The attacks come a week after three Americans, including two US soldiers, were killed in Syria’s Palmyra. https://t.co/BdDzaLeHla

— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) December 20, 2025

Sources cited in regional reporting said that U.S. troops stationed at the Al-Shaddadi base, located south of the northeastern city of Al-Hasaka, also participated in the operation. The attacks reportedly included airstrikes and missile launches and were supported by fighter aircraft from the Jordanian Armed Forces.

U.S. authorities have repeatedly justified their military presence in Syria on security grounds, arguing that it has prevented Islamic State from regaining strength in the country.

The latest strikes highlight the continuation of U.S. military operations in Syria following last year’s political shift, as Washington maintains actions it says are aimed at targeting Islamic State infrastructure and responding to attacks on its personnel.


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For more than half a century, pandas have helped serve as ambassadors for China around the world, but their time in Japan appears to be drawing to a close with the last two bears in the country set to return next month. Hopes of receiving new ones soon appear dim given the current tensions between the two countries. Tokyo’s metropolitan government has reportedly been in talks with China about receiving new pandas, but there is no sign of agreement in the wake of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae...


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UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres denounces escalating Israeli settler violence against Palestinian civilians and their property in the occupied West Bank.


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TORONTO – As global Filipinos commemorate International Migrants Day on December 18, Filipino migrants in Canada call on the Philippine government to respond to migrants’ urgent needs and provide genuine assistance to Filipinos abroad.

According to Migrante Canada, the continued struggle of Filipinos caused by “poverty, landlessness, lack of livable wages and decent working and living conditions, and systemic government corruption continues to force Filipinos to leave the country every day.”

Migrante Canada joined Migrante International in declaring December 18 as Zero Remittance Day, expressing outrage against systemic government corruption in the Philippines, where hard-earned remittances sent daily by Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) are pocketed by the state.

In 2024 alone, nearly $40 billion was sent by migrants in remittances, boosting the government’s economy while migrant workers remain neglected and abused in host countries.

‘Zero remittance against corruption’

In an online discussion yesterday, December 17, Migrante Ontario chairperson, Marisol Bobadilla, emphasized the importance of remittances to her family. Having been an OFW for over a decade, Bobadilla shared that all her earnings go toward her family’s basic needs—food and school fees yet these same hard-earned funds are pocketed by officials instead of being used for much-needed social services.

“Lahat ng pera na kinita ko since 2021, mula Taiwan hanggang dito sa Canada, wala akong savings. Ibig sabihin, lahat ng pera na kinita ko ay napadala ko sa Pilipinas,” she said.

(All the money I earned since 2021, from Taiwan to Canada, I have no savings. Meaning, all the money I earned, I sent back to the Philippines.)

Filipino migrants continues to suffer

Just two days ago, Migrante Canada, Migrante Manitoba, and allied organizations from the Migrants Resource Centre Canada met with 17 Filipino Temporary Foreign Workers in Winnipeg who were unjustly terminated by their employer, 4Tracks Ltd., only two weeks into their employment.

According to the migrants’ rights group, the terminations followed serious violations of the workers’ health, safety, and labour rights. The employer failed to provide proper onboarding and employment orientation, did not supply the tools and equipment required for their work as mechanics as stated in their contracts and job descriptions, and denied them adequate accommodations, food, and appropriate winter clothing including jackets, gloves, and boots, all of which were clearly stipulated in their employment agreements.

The workers arrived in Canada less than a month ago from the Philippines through the placement agency Venture Management, which is based in the Philippines.

In response, the group demands that the Philippine government immediately address the urgent needs of overseas Filipinos by providing genuine protection and services to OFWs, ending mandatory premium hikes and state exactions, investigating and prosecuting the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA), Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Department of Migrant Workers (DMW), and related agencies including the Office of the President and the Office of the Vice President for plunder and corruption, freeing Mary Jane Veloso, ending the labour export program, and creating genuine jobs, services, and development so migration becomes a choice, not a necessity. (RTS)

The post On International Migrants Day, Filipino migrants in Canada demand genuine protection and services from the PH gov’t appeared first on Bulatlat.


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A US-based chemist has been awarded one of Russia’s top science honours, prevailing over a competitive field of applicants from 40 nations, including some of the “strongest applications” from China, according to the prize chair. Valery Fokin, a professor at the University of Southern California (USC), was awarded the Vyzov Prize in the Discovery category for inventing a reaction that redefined the concept of click chemistry and transformed molecular science and the chemistry of living...


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The US carries out a large wave of, what it has called, “retaliatory air and ground strikes against dozens of Daesh targets” in Syria.


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“Many people were crying because of the Court’s decision. It was as if they had lost hope.”

By Francessca Abalos
Bulatlat.com

MANILA – A week before Christmas, residents of Sitio Marihangin, Bugsuk Island got a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) that now allows those who claim land ownership to enter the island.

The TRO received on December 17 is part of nine alleged landowners’ “accion reivindicatoria” case to recover ownership of the island. It is effective for 20 days upon receipt and prevents the islanders from barring the entry of representatives of the supposed titleholders.

Failure to comply with a TRO is considered indirect contempt and may lead to fines of P30,000 ($545.45), a six-month imprisonment, or both.

The Palawan Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 165 in Brooke’s Point issued the TRO on December 15, four days after the December 11 hearing. It may be recalled that it took one month for the Muntinlupa court to junk the community’s injunction against armed security guards. There was also a 20-year delay in the residents’ Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) application.

Different day, same battle

Residents of Sitio Marihangin are familiar with legal harassment and lapses. Many of their community leaders have been arrested on “grave coercion” charges, decades-old illegal fishing allegations, and cyberlibel.

They said that these developments are related to San Miguel Corporation’s (SMC) eco-tourism plans for the island that require Sitio Marihangin to be vacated.

Indigenous Palaw’an and chairperson of the Sambilog – Balik Bugsuk Movement Romillano Calo described the TRO as another way for SMC to displace the community. If everyone on the island adheres to the 20-day order, Calo said that the claimants can establish whatever structures they want.

A statement from the Sambilog – Balik Bugsuk Movement agreed with Calo, calling the TRO a legal ploy. The TRO took advantage of the Christmas break for “claimants, widely believed to be backed by [SMC] interests, [to] execute a full-scale invasion, demolition, and forced eviction of nearly 300 indigenous Molbog, Pala’wan, Cagayanen, and non-indigenous residents from Sitio Mariahangin, Bugsuk Island.”

“Many people were crying because of the Court’s decision. It was as if they had lost hope,” Calo said.

He said that they have begun to prepare for the worst case scenario with their Sambilog Chapter President Marilyn Pelayo considering the evacuation of Sitio Marihangin’s children.

Not moved

Calo noted that the residents felt sadness, annoyance, and distress. Sambilog leader and indigenous Molbog resident Jilmani Naseron expressed that they were also outraged.

Naseron said that the TRO and its hasty release failed to recognize the community’s indigenous rights: “It should not be this way. They should also make it clear that we, Indigenous People, have rights. And those rights demand that our land be returned to us, that we [be recognized] as the owners of this place, this island.”

Regardless of the court’s ruling, both Calo and Naseron stressed that the community will not allow the alleged landowners and representatives to set foot on the island.

While violence is not an option for Sitio Marihangin, they said that they will defend their land until they die. (RTS, DAA)

The post Sitio Marihangin residents fight unfavorable temporary restraining order appeared first on Bulatlat.


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By Dulce Amor Rodriguez
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — The University of Melbourne awarded Bayan Muna chairperson and human rights lawyer Neri Colmenares the degree of Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) on Dec. 17, recognizing his work for the poor and marginalized and his contributions to human rights and accountability.

The university cited Colmenares’ role in advancing legal accountability in the Philippines and beyond, particularly through international human rights mechanisms and domestic legal reforms.

Colmenares studied at the University of Melbourne in the early 2000s, researching the implementation of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in Philippine law. He later served as an associate of the Asian Law Centre and lectured on international criminal law.

His academic work shaped his legislative record. As Bayan Muna representative, Colmenares voted for the passage of Republic Act 9851 in 2009, which criminalized genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes under Philippine law.

The university also recognized his efforts to advance Philippine engagement with the International Criminal Court, including work related to seeking accountability for extrajudicial killings during the Duterte administration.

Colmenares’ anti-corruption work also figured in the conferment. The citation noted his oral arguments before the Supreme Court opposing the transfer of PhilHealth funds to unprogrammed appropriations, which the Court later voided.

In 2018, Colmenares lectured in Melbourne on “Money Politics,” warning that pork barrel funds persist in the national budget despite a Supreme Court ruling declaring the Priority Development Assistance Fund unconstitutional.

During the Melbourne Law School graduation ceremony, Colmenares urged graduates to pursue human rights work. “The struggle for human rights is a borderless struggle,” he said.

The Integrated Bar of the Philippines Human Rights Committee welcomed the conferment, saying the honor affirms Colmenares’ “steadfast commitment to advancing human rights and combating corruption.” (RTS)

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On Friday, Venezuelan Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello stated that, thanks to the popular-military-police fusion, Venezuela is a territory of peace and will continue to be so, despite the external threats facing the country. Hours earlier, the US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) announced its 28th strike near the Venezuelan coast since September 2, elevating the number of assassinated civilians to 104.

“This year, 2025, we can tell the country that we have fulfilled our commitment to our people and to the Revolution. We have followed the instruction given to us by President Nicolás Maduro to lead these institutions to guarantee the peace and tranquility of Venezuelans,” Minister Cabello said at a ceremony for the delivery of new vehicles to different security forces.

“Today, Venezuela is a territory of peace and it must remain so,” Cabello added, noting that “police officers are ready and willing to defend the homeland from any threat: internal or external, whatever it may be called, be it the most powerful empire in the world, our police officers are present to defend the homeland like never before in a perfect popular-military-police fusion.”

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Fight against gangs and internal enemies
Minister Cabello reported that Venezuela guarantees the comprehensive provision of security agencies to maintain the effectiveness of the work they carry out in the fight against drugs, gangs, and internal enemies of the homeland. He noted that gangs disguise themselves in many ways: “Criminal gangs, drug traffickers, terrorists, and conspiracy groups as well.”

To these, the most far-right political sector of Venezuela has joined “to generate unrest, doubt, and fear in our people.” However, the people have been able to overcome and, despite the threats that currently loom over the nation, “the people are happy in the street, at peace.”

Lowest crime rate
He highlighted that thanks to the coordinated, systemic, and comprehensive work among all the security forces, the homicide rate has been significantly reduced.

“Crime rates in Venezuela are now among the lowest in the world. Countries that constantly attack Venezuela cannot withstand comparison,” he said, citing the relevant statistics.

Compared to 2024, the homicide rate has decreased, with 340 fewer murders recorded to date.

Regarding drug trafficking, Venezuela has achieved “the largest drug seizure in its history, except for the year following its break with the DEA. Almost 70 tons of drugs seized.”

“This year, 2025, we can say: Mission accomplished,” he added.

US extrajudicial killings
Meanwhile, on Thursday night, US SOUTHCOM announced a new “kinetic strike,” a euphemism for what US and United Nations experts have labeled as extrajudicial executions.

In two strikes against two different small boats sailing in Eastern Pacific waters, five new assassinations were confirmed, making the kill list surpass the 100 mark and reach 104 civilians killed.

President Maduro Says Trump’s Actions Reveal True Intentions for Venezuela, Calls for Great Colombia Unity Amid More Killings at Sea (+Petro)

The current level of strikes and assassinated civilians in the Eastern Pacific, since September 2, now surpasses the Caribbean Sea death toll. Fifty-six civilians executed in the Eastern Pacific represent 54% of the total, with 17 reported strikes in that area.

With recent statements coming from the White House claiming ownership of Venezuelan oil, the accusations of Venezuela being a narco-terrorist state seem distant. According to experts, the shift in the US killing spree to the Pacific Ocean also supports Venezuelan claims of the operation being a regime change operation masked with the “war on drugs” narrative.

(Últimas Noticias) by María Milagros Sánchez with Orinoco Tribune content

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JRE/SF


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