MANILA, Philippines — A House leader is asking the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) and the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) to probe into the reported incidents of red-tagging of community pantries, which forced some of them to pause operations.
“There is a need to look into the red-tagging activities to put a stop to it if it results in good ideas like community pantries being forced to close down,” Deputy Speaker Rufus Rodriguez (Cagayan de Oro) said in House Resolution No. 1725.
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Rodriguez said a community pantry in his city closed down after being “red-tagged and systematically harassed,” while a Muslim restaurateur also in his city was supposedly profiled by police after she set up a community pantry outside her restaurant.
It is not clear, however, what an investigation by the CHR and the NBI would result in as there is currently no law penalizing red-tagging.
Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon has filed a bill in the upper chamber which seeks to define and penalize the crime of red-tagging, but this is still pending at the committee level.
Aside from Rodriguez, other House leaders including have also ramped up the offensive against the red-tagging of community pantries.
Deputy Speaker Bienvenido Abante Jr. (Manila), for one, has filed a resolution seeking to realign P16 billion from President Rodrigo Duterte's anti-communist task force to fund cash aid for displaced workers and the poor.
Meanwhile, Deputy Speaker Michael Romero (1-PACMAN party-list), has called for an investigation into how the task force's spending.
It is only now that House leaders have pushed back against the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict's unsubstantiated red-tagging of civilians, which the leftist Makabayan bloc has been consistently sounding the alarm on.
State forces have accused community pantry organizers of taking part in the armed communist rebellion and profiled them, which the CHR said was “concerning.”
Following the uproar over the red-tagging and profiling of community pantry organizers and volunteers, the spokespersons of the anti-communist task force, who were among those who baselessly red-tagged community pantries, were ordered to stop making statements about the mutual aid initiative.