PHILIPPINES PROVIDES ITS BIGGEST FUNDING TO BOOST UN HUMAN RIGHTS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE WORK, EMPOWERMENT OF VULNERABLE GROUPS

GENEVA 15 June 2021 – At the virtual briefing of the United Nations (UN) High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on her Office’s activities in 2020, the Philippines welcomed the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights’ (OHCHR)’s robust and practical assistance to States in “building back better,” in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly with respect to social protection and mitigating impacts on social, economic, and development rights on 10 June 2021.

Philippine Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Geneva Ambassador Evan P. Garcia cited the report’s affirmation of the wide scope of OHCHR toolbox for facilitating positive transformation on the ground. In recognition of this, the Philippines provided in 2021 its biggest voluntary contribution to the OHCHR in years, to support the OHCHR work in extending technical and capacity-building assistance to States and in empowering vulnerable groups.

“We are encouraged by the positive stories of individuals and communities directly benefiting from OHCHR capacity-building support, a more defined embeddedness of OHCHR activities within UN’s national programs, and the growing portfolio of projects engaging regional organizations,” remarked Ambassador Garcia.

The Philippines also highlighted that the OHCHR´s constructive and result-oriented workstreams contribute to the prevention of human rights violations and abuses and called for continued support from the international community towards the promotion of human rights grounded on the priorities of countries and ownership across sectors. END

For more information, visit https://www.genevapm.dfa.gov.ph or https://www.facebook.com/PHinGenevaUN/.

 

 

Source: Republic of Philippines Department Of Foreign Affairs

FIFTEEN MEN ARRESTED FOR BEING MEMBERS OF AN UNLAWFUL SOCIETY AND DISORDERLY BEHAVIOUR

The Police have arrested 14 men, aged between 17 and 40, for being suspected members of an unlawful society and a 42-year-old man for alleged disorderly behaviour at the vicinity of Block 191 Boon Lay Drive on 13 June 2021.

The Police are aware that several videos capturing a funeral procession were circulated online. In an operation carried out by officers from Criminal Investigation Department and Jurong Police Division, the Police arrested 14 men for their suspected involvement in secret society activities and another man for allegedly behaving in a disorderly manner while at a funeral wake in the Boon Lay Drive neighbourhood. Preliminary investigations revealed that two purported secret society members were allegedly wearing shirts emblazoned with their secret society’s insignia. The Police are also looking into potential breaches of COVID-19 safe distancing measures during the funeral procession.

Any person who is a member or acts as a member of an unlawful society under section 14(3) of the Societies Act shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years, or both. Anyone convicted for contravening a control order under the COVID-19 (Temporary Measures) (Control Order) Regulations 2020 will be liable, on first conviction, to a fine not exceeding $10,000, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or both.

The Police have zero tolerance towards secret society activities and will not hesitate to take firm action against those who are associated with gangs and blatantly disregard the law.

 

Source: Singapore Police Force

APPEAL FOR NEXT-OF-KIN – MR CHEW HING SEW

The Police are appealing for the next-of-kin of 80-year-old Mr Chew Hing Sew­ to come forward.

Mr Chew, a former resident at Blk 4 Beach Road, had passed away on 8 June 2021.

Anyone with information is requested to call the Police hotline at 1800-255-0000 or submit information online at www.police.gov.sg/iwitness. All information will be kept strictly confidential.

 

Source: Singapore Police Force

WOMAN INVESTIGATED FOR PROVIDING FALSE INFORMATION TO A PUBLIC SERVANT

The Police are investigating a 58-year-old woman for allegedly providing false information to a public servant.

On 14 June 2021 at about 8pm, the Police were alerted to a case of house breaking and theft in a residential unit along Boon Lay Drive. The woman purportedly informed the Police that someone entered her unit and jewellery amounting to $4,000 was stolen.

During the course of investigations, officers from Jurong Police Division detected several inconsistencies in the woman’s account and the CCTV footages that were obtained by the officers. Preliminary investigations revealed that the woman had purportedly provided false information to the police officers and was not a victim of the reported crime.

Police investigations against the woman are ongoing. The offence of giving any information which a person knows to be false to a public servant carries an imprisonment term which may extend to two years, a fine, or both.

The Police would like to remind members of the public that police resources could have been put to better use in dealing with real crimes and emergencies than investigating into false reports or false information. Those who lodge false police reports or provide false information will face serious consequences under the law.

 

 

Source: Singapore Police Force

Many Young People in China ‘Lie Flat’ as Good Life Seems Unattainable

WASHINGTON/TAIPEI – Fed up with a culture of overwork, through-the-roof housing prices and skyrocketing living costs, many Chinese youth are “lying flat” to express their frustration with the lack of upward social mobility.

Lying flat includes opting out of getting married, having children, purchasing a home or car, and joining the corporate money-making machine, according to China’s online discussion forum Zhihu. The tang ping movement embraces doing the bare minimum to maintain a minimalist lifestyle. It rejects the so-called “996 life” of working 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week, a tech industry schedule that has bled into other sectors and often fails to provide sufficient income for exhausted workers to get ahead.

And it worries Chinese authorities, as the government has long equated the employment of college graduates with social stability, according to the official China Daily. In the COVID-19-influenced job market, the Class of 2021 is competing for jobs with the still-unemployed members of the Class of 2020, according to the South China Morning Post.

And because the post-pandemic recovery has been driven by an expansion of blue-collar jobs, according to The New York Times, lying flat makes sense to many.

“I graduated from a top university in Nanjing with a degree in architecture two years ago, but I struggled to find a job and stayed there,” said Zhang, a 24-year-old living in the rural area of China’s southwest Sichuan province, of his choice to lie flat. He asked VOA Mandarin to use just his surname for fear of attracting attention.

Zhang said that a lot of his classmates and friends are still trying to find their way in big cities, “but they come back home either with diseases from overworking or with a mountain of debt.”

Lifestyle choice

“I chose to lie flat from the beginning. It’s too hard to buy a house and a car in big cities. It’s hard to find someone to marry, and if you have kids, you have to enroll them in all sorts of activities to give them a head start,” he said. “So I chose my current lifestyle. Simple food, simple life, some gigs to make a little bit of money.”

The first online reference to the term appeared in March in the discussion forum Tieba on the Chinese search engine Baidu. The anonymous post “Lying Flat Is Justice” described how to live a happy life without a stable income in a society where the average monthly income of college graduates in 2019 was just over $777, or RMB 5,400, according to the website China Banking News.

“You just lie flat. Lying flat at home, lying flat outside, lying flat like the street cats and dogs. … I choose to lie flat, and I’m no longer stressed,” the post said. The author, who did not specify his income, wrote of working temporary gigs and spending about $32, or RMB 200, a month. The post’s author did not reveal his housing costs, but many unmarried Chinese young adults live with their parents.

Government responds

By late May, the Chinese government was countering such notions. “China is at one of the most important stages of its long road to national rejuvenation. Young people are the hope of this country, and neither their personal situation nor the situation of this country will allow them to ‘collectively lie flat,'” said a May 28 editorial  in the Global Times, a tabloid controlled by the Chinese Communist Party and quoted by Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post.

Analysts say the lying flat attitude is rooted in the lack of upward social mobility. People born in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s benefited from Deng Xiaoping’s 1978 policy, a series of transformative economic reforms that opened China up to the international community and foreign investment. The reform set the stage for the emergence of Chinese companies with international reach, such as Huawei and Alibaba.

“In the Deng Xiaoping era, China launched the policy to ‘let some people get rich first,'” Xie Fei, a host at Henan Broadcasting System and a current affairs commentator at China’s Zhejiang Television, told VOA Mandarin. “Yet the current generation finds that they no longer have the same opportunities as their parents to achieve upward mobility. In other words, they can’t expect to have the explosive growth of wealth as their parents’ generation.”

According to 2017 data from the latest iteration of a recurring Chinese survey by the Chinese Academy of Social Science, people under 35 experienced a high level of unstable employment and relatively low salaries. Lin Thung-Hong, a research fellow at the Institute of Sociology of Academia Sinica in Taiwan, said this is partly due to the economic slowdown in 2015 and 2016. One of the survey’s key findings is that college graduates in China face difficulties finding jobs.

“China’s economic development has plateaued, young people have fewer job opportunities, and the lying down attitude reflects the difficulties in the overall economy in China,” he told VOA Mandarin.

‘Just not sustainable’

Once graduates find jobs, many feel they’re expected to overwork. Lucy Li, 35, works in the banking industry in Beijing. She asked to use a pseudonym, fearing retaliation by her employer.

“I know 996 is prevalent in the tech industry, but now it has spread to every sector,” she told VOA Mandarin. “In our bank, the leadership will drop by unannounced around 8 p.m. to see who’s still working, and those still in the office are the ones getting promoted.”

“So everyone ends up working 12 hours a day,” she said. “It’s just not sustainable.”

Another worker, Wang, said he quit his job with the tech giant Alibaba because he often started work around 9 a.m., returned home around 7 p.m. and then returned to the office after his two children went to bed, or around 9 p.m. Back at the office, he usually worked until midnight — or as late as 2-3 a.m. if he was developing a product or it was the busy season. He asked VOA Mandarin to use only his surname to avoid attracting attention.

“It’s just a culture. We are doing the things we love, but it’s also pretty draining if you are working 24/7,” he told VOA Mandarin.

In 2019, Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, famously said on China’s Twitter-like social media platform Weibo that “it’s a blessing to be able to do 996.”

“If you are not doing 996 when you are young, when can you do it? If we are doing things we love, 996 is not a problem at all,” he wrote. Widely criticized, the post was deleted.

The 996 culture has led to death by overwork, a phenomenon first recognized in Japan’s workplace culture, or karoshi. Japan passed the Work Style Reform Bill in 2018 to limit brutally long work weeks.

Earlier this year in China, the deaths of two employees of the online agricultural marketplace Pinduoduo sparked discussion of overwork. Many young people took to social media to say they didn’t want the 996 lifestyle, and they started to advocate for a more relaxed attitude toward work.

On May 28, Weibo polled users about lying flat. Among the 241,000 people who took the survey, 43% firmly agreed with the concept, 31% said they somewhat agree with it, and another 18% said they would like to lie flat, but they have too many other responsibilities.  About 80% of Weibo’s 850 million users are 17 to 33 years old, according to a guide to advertising on the site.

The popularity of the lying flat movement concerns Beijing because it runs against Chinese President Xi Jinping’s notion of a Chinese dream. In 2012, Xi used the term when he was first promoted to the top Communist Party post, saying China must “strive to achieve the Chinese dream of great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.”

The Global Times quoted Chinese sociologists and educators, saying the younger generations are more self-centered and more sensitive to pressure than their elders. ”Instead of always following the ‘virtues’ of struggle, endure and sacrifice to bear the stresses, they prefer a temporary ‘lying down’ as catharsis and adjustment,” the article said.

The official Xinhua News Agency wrote in a commentary published in late May that “lying flat is shameful. Only hard work brings happiness.”

Xinhua later posted a video of an 86-year-old Chinese scientist surnamed Zhao who rises at 4 a.m. each morning to work. “After his retirement, he still works for 10-12 hours a day voluntarily for the country and for the people,” Xinhua said.

The video sparked a new wave of criticism among Chinese netizens. One post said, “The scientist is at his fifth level of needs, which is to realize his value in life. I’m at the first level, which is survival. How can you compare the two?” The other read, “Lying flat is not something I actually enjoy; it’s a helpless option under the unbearable pressure of life.”

Lin, with Academia Sinica, said the immobility in China’s economy, society and politics has led to the stagnation of the entire national mobility system. And without social mobility, there would be no “Chinese dream.”

“The people are lying flat. The country is dreaming. It’s pretty ironic,” he told VOA Mandarin.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Doctor-Activist Defiant Against Myanmar Military

MAE SOT, THAILAND – When Myanmar’s military shocked the world by announcing a coup earlier this year, many people inside the country were stunned at the news. After decades under military rule, they had enjoyed 10 years of a developing democracy until the armed forces took back control.

Initially, most of the country merely looked on, hesitant to begin a rebellion given Myanmar’s violent past. But as the junta installed its own Cabinet and detained members of the National League for Democracy, including leader Aung San Suu Kyi, an uprising began brewing.

Residents banged pots and pans in anger in the first few days after the coup, signaling their disapproval of the military takeover. Major protests didn’t materialize until the influence of one doctor turned activist became apparent.

Spring revolution 

Dr. Ko Tayzar San, 33, from Mandalay, is largely credited with leading the first anti-coup demonstrations, a movement that is now known as the Spring Revolution. Today, he is on the run.

He recalls the first moments of the rebellion against the junta, officially the State Administrative Council (SAC).

Infuriated with the armed forces takeover, some people had planned an immediate backlash, but the swirling rumors of a coup could not be verified.

“On February 1, they (Myanmar military) turned off the mobile network in the whole country. At that moment, we didn’t confirm any information, what is going on and what is happening,” Tayzar San told VOA.

Three days later, he took to the streets of Mandalay to protest with friends and other demonstrators who resisted the military’s power grab. Four of his friends were arrested that day, and one has since been killed.

Soon after, the soldiers came for him. The activist knew then that his life would never be the same.

“As for me, the soldiers raided and destroyed my home, where my family lived before the coup. They knew my home address, so they came looking for me and smashed and break the whole house, confiscated everything and three cars.”

“I already know from that moment I decided to get involved. Anytime I can be arrested. Anytime I could be shot and killed, and life could be ruined. … That we already knew and accepted,” he said.

On the run 

Speaking from an undisclosed location, Tayzar San said he misses his family the most. He added that it was recently his daughter’s second birthday, and he hadn’t seen her for over 120 days.

“I have been on the run for a long time. My arrest warrant has been issued since the third week of February. I have not been home since February 2,” he said.

But he believes the heightened security concerns are felt everywhere.

“If you live in your own home, you could be shot at any time. You can be arrested for no reason, (and) maybe threatened (with) your life. There is no security in the whole country right now.”

Until recently, Tayzar San hadn’t been known for his pro-democracy advocacy, especially when compared with other well-known activists who have risen to prominence in response to Myanmar’s deep-rooted political issues in recent years.

“Before the coup, my professional work was (as) executive director at Yone Kyi Yar Knowledge Propagation Society, a civil society organization in Mandalay. And I am also a doctor, so I do medical treatment in charity clinics.”

But ever since Myanmar’s anti-coup protests first erupted across the country, Tayzar San has been involved. Four and a half months on, he’s still at it, often seen roaring into a megaphone in protest.

Efforts noted 

And his efforts have recently been rewarded. Local media reported how he was the recipient of South Korea’s June Democratic Uprising award, named after the 1987 uprising that led to South Korea’s democratization.

“A lot has been given in these four months. Many people have fallen, and many lives have been lost, and people are in prison,” he said, adding that Myanmar is facing both socioeconomic and business crises.

“Today, Myanmar is in the darkest time. However, in the midst of so much suffering, the people are fully in the mood to reject the dictator,” he added.

Protests peaked during the first two months after the coup, but since then, mass demonstrations have waned, largely due to the military’s violent crackdown on the city. According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a rights-monitoring group based in Thailand, at least 860 have been killed and thousands detained.

Tayzar San said demonstrators had been given no option but to respond with “guerrilla protests.”

“We will oppose this dictatorship any way we can,” he said.

Looking forward 

As for international intervention, Tayzar San believes implementing an arms embargo would reduce the Myanmar military’s arsenal of weapons.

“I believe that the role of the international community will continue to support as long as the people of the country continue to fight,” he said.

New opposition movements and organizations have formed since the coup. The Civil Disobedience Movement has led to huge strikes across the country, while the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw includes ousted politicians of the democratic government. The National Unity Government is claiming to be Myanmar’s legitimate administration, with the People’s Defense Force as its armed wing. The junta has declared that illegal.

Yet challenges remain. Ethnic minority groups have been fighting for autonomy and land control for over 70 years, and deep historical animosities exist among them. But with the military’s coup so drastic and far-reaching, hopes are pinned on the country to unite against one common enemy.

“To make our country peaceful, where people are treated as human beings, it is very clear that this will only happen if we can create a federal democratic union,” Tayzar San said.

“For me, the new Myanmar (will be a) happy country that we want to pass on to the next generation,” he added.

 

Source: Voice of America